Tag: Port Harcourt

  • Native & Vogue: Top models, designers showcase at Port Harcourt Fashion Week

    Native & Vogue: Top models, designers showcase at Port Harcourt Fashion Week

    •Kate Henshaw, Uti Nwachukwu, Chidinma, 2face, others add splendor

    Pomp and ceremony rent the air in Port Harcourt last week, with world-acclaimed fashion houses and top models rocking the runway at the Presidential Hotel, Port Harcourt, venue of the Port Harcourt International Fashion Week.

    Tagged Native & Vogue, not only did the three-day show feature a medley of choice clothing, it reenacted Port Harcourt and Rivers State’s profile as a creative industry hub, reputed for a blend of local and international showcase.

    Every night, beginning from Friday, September 19 to Sunday September 21, an assortment of adorable wares are further made desirable by the crowd of fashionists, businessmen and women, captains of industry and government officials who watch models showcase them elegantly on the runway.

    Among the leading international and Nigeria-based designers on parade were Malcolm Kluk & Christian Gabriel Du Toit popularly known as KluK CGDT from South Africa, Ade Bakare from the United Kingdom, Agbani Darego, Frank Osodi, Zizi Cardow, Yemi Osunkoya (Kosibah), Yomi Casual and Amos Ejiro Tafiri among others.

    The event was also high on celebrity models, musicians, actors and television personalities.

    While delectable actress Kate Henshaw and Jara famed presenter and actor, Uti Nwachukwu were co anchors on the show, Uti also had a stint on the runway, modeling for Yomi Casual, as did former Mr. Nigeria, Bryan Okwara and model turned actor Alex Ekubo.

    With music artistes such as the Cohbams Asukwo, Chidinma Ekile, Kcee of the defunct Kcee Presh and Tuface Idibia, the event went a notch higher in entertaining guests.

    Other celebrities at the event are Tanzanian model Milen Magese; Nigeria’s Eku Edewor, Denrele Edun, Melvin Oduah, Isio Wanogho, Kosibah and Port Harcourt-based comedian Daniel De Humorous, who rendered rib cracking jokes at the show.

    Sponsored by the Rivers State Government and jointly organized by Neo Mantra, an intellectual property development company in partnership with Vanguard Allure and Bunor Creazioni, a renowned Nigeria indigenous fashion design, consultancy and model management firm headed by Frank Osodi, the event was a Private Public Partnership (PPP) initiative of the state government, which also featured top and upcoming Port Harcourt-based fashion designers showcasing their works.

    As the upcoming designers were also mentored by the professionals in attendance, the 3-day fashion event also staged a competition for the young designers, with Ibitein Thompson coming tops, and winning an all-expenses paid six months scholarship to an international fashion school.

    Native & Vogue Port Harcourt Fashion Week had its maiden edition in September last year, and according to its organisers, the success of the first edition is the reason the show became inevitable, despite the threat of Ebola Virus Desease (EVD). Incidentally, the presence of international models and designers at the show was a proof that Port Harcourt and indeed Nigeria, is EVD-clean.

    In just two years, Port Harcourt joins the Fashion Week tradition, which has New York, Paris, Milan and London leading the global event. Usually, the show happens at special times in the year when good-looking humans dress funny and somehow dictate to the rest of the world what it means to look good and fashionable.

  • Port Harcourt: Garden City where business and pleasure cohabit

    Port Harcourt: Garden City where business and pleasure cohabit

    Port Harcourt, the capital city of Rivers State otherwise called the Garden City, has in the last few years witnessed a lot of physical development and aesthetic upgrades. In this piece, SHOLA O’NEIL and BOLAJI OGUNDELE write about a city that has continued to grow in population and demands

    THE Garden City of Port Harcourt, is perhaps one of the cities in the South-South region where business and pleasure mix most easily. The older folk (those who lived there before and shortly after the Nigerian civil war) refer to it as Pitakwa (or Pota); the locals just call it Potakot. Whichever you choose, you cannot be wrong in this wonderful city of endless possibilities and opportunities.

    It is a city of many parts; each with its own unique history, landscape and denizens. “The parts of the city known as Town, Lagos, Diobu, and so on are the original Port Harcourt, from where the town started. You will also notice that those are the areas close to the waterfront and the port areas. The houses there are old and most of them are built without fence because in their times, there was no need for high security fencing. The city was peaceful,” James Nwokedi, an itinerant Igbo trader at the popular Mile 1 flyover told our reporter.

    But times have changed and the city has changed with it. The GRA (Government Reservation Area) Phase 1 (Old GRA) houses the government quarters and some prominent Rivers families. The architectural designs of their houses and style sometimes tell of their histories or what some call old money. There are also Phases 2 and 3 GRAs with massive structures and architectural masterpieces owned by politicians, oil magnates and top flying business executives.

    The Diobu area of the city is arguably the most planned enclave of the city, if not the entire Niger Delta region. Dominated mostly by the Igbo and other immigrants, this area, like Town (peopled by the Kalabaris), comprise of ancient apartment buildings in unfenced plot on well-linked network of roads.

    Port Harcourt is also the undisputable oil capital of Nigeria; a position enhanced by the presence of dozens of oil and services companies  from Shell Petroleum Development Company (SPDC) to Nigerian Agip Oil Company, Schlumberger, WEAFRI and others that fled Warri, Delta State in the heat of the Warri crisis found bases in Port Harcourt.

    The relocation of such companies have attracted greener pastures seekers from all over the country to the city peopled mostly by the Ikwerre and a motley of other groups from within and outside the state.

    With the growth in opportunities, the population of the Garden City (put at about 1.38 million in the 2006 census) swelled. The increase in population is fuelling a property boom that has opened up and linked the major Rumus (enclaves) of the city. The city has now extended from Emohua, headquarters of the local council through Choba, Mgbuoba into Rumuokuta, Rumuokoro, Rumuola and others, and turning it into a megacity.

    The blessings of its status as a fast-growing cosmopolitan city come with the headache of knotty traffic jams that sometimes stretch for several miles and span hours. Driving through Port Harcourt can be quite chaotic and unpredictable. There are some junctions in the city that seem jinxed to always remain locked, defying the efforts and wisdom of traffic marshals thereby creating unpleasant driving experiences for road users, especially private car owners whose miseries are compounded by bus drivers and their taxi counterparts. The state government has since abolished the use of okada (motorcycles) and keke (tricycles) in the metropolis.

    Governor Rotimi Amaechi, like his successor, has also made several efforts to tackle the perennial traffic problem in the city. A number of projects have been undertaken to free the roads, including blocking U-turn points at bottle-neck junctions. At some other intersections, more human traffic controls are introduced to augment either the traffic lights or already existing number of traffic marshals. In other places, the critical junctions get flyovers. Eleme Junction and the Agip Junction Roundabout are two examples of massive efforts at restoring sanity to the roads.

    The current administration, at inception, embarked on decisive urban renewal efforts, leading to the widening of existing main accesses like the Ikwerre Road, which has been dualised with wide walkways, lying atop one of the most complex network of gigantic underground drains that empty into surrounding canals and creeks. Rumuola, NTA, Ada George and Elekahia roads, among others, have also been taken from the old to the new; dualised and widened with sidewalks.

    But perhaps the most revolutionary transportation scheme is the multibillion naira Mono Rail project, which was undertaken by the Amaechi administration. When completed, the light rail is expected to convey thousands of passengers daily. Experts believe that it would help reduce the number of vehicles on the road drastically and by extension alleviate traffic bottlenecks.

    Besides roads, new model primary schools and ultramodern healthcare centres have been built across the city. Those built close to the main roads accentuate the environment, printing some sort of serenity and beauty you only see in facilities belonging to multinational oil companies. At the Emenike Junction, in the Mile One area, along Ikwerre Road, St. Mary Primary School is outstanding with its lush green and impressive structures. This sight is replicated in different parts of the city.

    The Garden City is a place to be when you think of relishing fun and good life. Being a very busy place, with an ever growing population, including those of varieties of foreign nationals, Port Harcourt is replete with fun spots: hangouts, hotels, nightclubs, cinemas and so on. You will find them all over the city.

    There was, however, a time in the life of the city when a social dislocation, in the form of cultism or gangsterism, almost robbed it of the peace and fun it had always been known for, but the Chibuike Rotimi Amaechi administration made the restoration of peace and order its first task when he assumed office in 2007. This restored normal life to the city, including a robust and bustling fun and recreation.

    The Abacha Road area of the city in the GRA Phase 2, parades an endless array of hotels, hangouts and club houses; Bourgain Villa, Aldgate Hotel, Casablanca, Aristo House, Elkan Terraces are a few of the places to be on Abacha Road. In some other parts of the phases of the new GRA you have places like Genesis Complex, which boasts of a state-of-the-art cinema and other facilities.

    Along Aba/Port Harcourt Expressway, the iconic Hotel Presidential defines the skyline with its unique architectural design and beautiful landscape. Just a few meters away on Tombia Street, the panoramic view of the Polo Club with its verdure lawns backing the Hotel Meridien and Golden Tulip hotels on the background captivates.

    “I could sit down here for hours just taking in the view; it is a wonderful city, this Port Harcourt,” Joy Nweke, a fashion designer who moved into the city in a few years ago told our reporter.

    “I fell in love with the city at first sight and since then, I find it difficult to leave. The life is fast and some people would tell you it is expensive. But if you cut you coat according to your cloth, you won’t have any problem,” Nweke said with a smile.

    The Silverbird Cinema is just a stone’s throw to the Old GRA, where you see the state’s version of the Three-Arm Zone; the Government House/state secretariat, the Rivers State House of Assembly Complex and the Judiciary Complex are located here. You can hardly exhaust touring the city in a hurry.

    Perhaps it should be mentioned here that administrations in the current republic have devoted time and effort to restoring those features of the oil city, which bequeathed the status and appellation of the ‘Garden City’ on it, hence the heavy investments into reviving and resuscitating its greens, as well as its hygiene culture.

    The Dr. Peter Odili administration started a programme of planting special green areas and parks at strategic spots, to serve the dual purposes of recreation points and landscape beautification. Samples of this abound across the city; adjacent the Port Harcourt Air Force Base, along Aba Road; there is the large space bordering the Port Harcourt Barracks, also along Aba Road; there are a few under the various flyovers dotting the city’s space.

    Along most of the major roads, especially the recently dualised ones, the Amaechi administration planted trees, most of which are still growing. The move would not only beautify the city, but is a forward-thinking one that could reduce carbon dioxide because a tree is said to be able to absorb as much as 48lb of the pollutant in a year.

    In the past few years, the city has shed the derogatory tag of ‘garbage city’, a corruption of the Garden City appellation. The unpleasant tag was engendered by the sordid sanitation culture of the people of the city. In those days, mountains of refuse became regular sights in open places, like on major roads, in different parts of the city, coupled with the disorganised management of markets, most of which were occupying between half and one-third of the major roads.

    Today, the services of labourers saddled with the responsibility of sweeping the roads and clearing refuse from the roads everyday have now become recognizable as both drivers and pedestrians on Port Harcourt roads now have a semblance of real road.

  • Gunmen kill three in Port Harcourt

    Three men were killed in Amadi-Ama village in Port Harcourt, the Rivers State capital, on Wednesday night.

    The gunmen were said to have walked into a compound known as Heavens Gate, at 9.40pm and shot at the victims.

    Eyewitness said two of the three victims died immediately; the third died in the hospital.

    The suspected assassins walked away unchallenged.

    It was gathered that one of the victims, identified as Iyowuna, was to contest in a youth group election tomorrow.

    Another victim was identified as Abiye; the identity of the third could not be established.

    It was gathered that Abiye and the third victim were Iyowuna’s friends who visited him that night.

    Police spokesman Ahmad Mohammad said “details of the incident were still sketchy”.

  • 10-day power cut in Port Harcourt

    The Port Harcourt Electricity Distribution Company (PHED), yesterday, announced that it would cut power supply to Port Harcourt between July 13 and 23 for repairs and upgrade of facilities.

    The company’s Public Affairs Manager, John Onyi, told reporters in Port Harcourt that there would be power outage from 9 am. to 4 pm daily during the period.

    Onyi said the power cut was to enable the Transmission Company of Nigeria (TCN) to work on PHED facilities to boost electricity distribution in the city.

    He added that “The upgrade will enhance the power wheeling capacity of the transmission lines, thereby enabling PHED to provide better services to its customers.’’

    The public affairs manager said the shortage of electricity supply in the state was due to insufficient megawatts the company received from the National Grid.

     

  • African Bishops storm Port Harcourt

    African Bishops storm Port Harcourt

    Religious leaders from all over the world gathered in Port Harcourt, Rivers State last weekend for the African Prayer Summit, a three-day programme with the theme, ‘Pulling down the Wrong Foundation in Africa’. It was organised by I Care Ministry International Church in Akpajo, Eleme Local Government Area of Rivers State, in conjunction with Africa chapter of Yesua Embassy Network of Churches International led by Archbishop Richard Ngozi Innocent.

    The organiser, Bishop Maxwell Oghenerume Okoro who is President of I Care Ministry, said it was to uproot all wrong foundations in marriage, family, religion, politics and economy, adding that wrong foundations are limiting people from achieving God’s purpose in their lives. He said that the only way to be free from certain bondages is to demolish their satanic foundations.

    Preachers at the programme included Bishop Franklin Mondo Muguisha (Uganda), Bishop Onana Compbell David (Cameroon), Bishop Dr. Denis Ejila (Gambia), Bishop Dr. Momodou Daffeh (Gambia), Apostle Dr. Israel Momo (Sierra Leone) Apostle Prince Ukandu (Liberia) and Apostle Livingstone Banjagala (Tanzania).

    There were a lot of shocking and unbelievable testimonies at the end of the programme. The representatives of the conference of Bishops also went out for evangelism, preaching to people to accept Christ. They also took the gospel to the palace of His Royal Highness Eze Wellington Nkpor, the Paramount Ruler of Akpajo Town, and the palace of His Royal Majesty Eze Robinson O. Robinson of Ekpeye land.

    Bishops, who spoke to The Nation during the prayer summit, said they were in Nigeria to destroy the wrong foundations which they blamed for the Boko Haram insurgency and other crisis in Nigeria. They noted that poverty, political assassinations, nepotism and corruption in African countries are due to wrong foundations which must be destroyed before Africa could have peace.

    Bishop Momodou Daffeh said God brought them together to pray for Africa and to free Africans from several bondages which have limited African countries from achieving and overcoming many challenging affecting them. “I want to thank God that we are in Nigeria. Our leader Archbishop Innocent, who God has used to gather us for a great spiritual work like this, visited my country sometimes ago. While he was there he said Africa must be prayed for. This is because when you look at the African countries today you will see crisis, nepotism, corruption, tribalism, lack of education, unemployment, killing etc. It is happening everywhere including Gambia and Nigeria. These are things that would undermine the development of African countries. African moral is no longer there, so the vision came that we should pray for Africa and Nigeria was chosen as the host country while I care Ministry in Port Harcourt was the venue.   We are here to pray for Nigeria’s wrong foundation especially the issue of Boko Haram which we know came as a result of wrong foundation.”

    He said the men of God also used the summit to pray to God to give African leaders the wisdom to understand that Africa cannot go anywhere until they recognize the need to involve the new generation.   “I feel we can do it, I feel we can stop corruption, political assassination, nepotism etc. and to introduce the youths to the new way of doing things where they could take over in future. The reason why youths take up arms in Africa today is because of lack of respect, we don’t give them what belongs to them, there is no job and you are riding big cars before them when you know that they are jobless.”

    Apostle Israel Momo from Sierra Leone said they have decreed into the land of Nigeria for peace to reign, assuring that very soon Nigeria will begin to witness peace in abundance.

    “In Egypt God raised a foreigner in the person of Joseph to solve their problem, in Africa God has raised us to solve African spiritual problems through the word of God. So no matter what the Boko Haram is doing they cannot do more than the power of God. We have already started a great job that will make Boko Haram to flee the country. ”

    He said their gathering at the palaces of the paramount ruler of Akpajo and that of Ekpeye Land was to ensure that God enters the heart of the indigenes and free them to possess their possessions.

    “We gathered at the kings palaces and I saw that the indigenes of this state are going to take their possessions. It is time for foreigners in Niger Delta region to line up at the back of the indigenes. This is an environment they had told me has enormous resources. It is time to take charge of their resources that is the reason we are here to pull down the wrong foundations so that people and countries can be free.”

    The host, Bishop Maxwell Okoro said Africa is a blessed continent and Nigeria is abundantly blessed. He regretted that wrong foundations have jeopardized the manifestation of God, making people and countries to live under the influence of darkness.

    “These things cannot be fought with dynamites, terrorism, gun; the only weapon strong enough to change the face of this country is fasting and prayer. God Almighty gave this inspiration to our Archbishop who spoke to me to host all the great men of God. Our prayer is for the breakthrough of the Niger Delta region, Rivers State and Nigeria as a whole, Port Harcourt is the womb of Nigeria and Niger Delta produces the resource of Nigeria. Anything that happens in Port Harcourt affects the Niger Delta and Nigeria. We prayed for economic stability, redirection of political economy, infrastructural development and everything that is inimical to the transformation of this country.”

    Bishop Okoro, who revealed that he was born deaf and dumb said God changed his testimony. “My mother is still alive, she stays here with me in Port Harcourt, you can ask her. According to my mother, I was in her womb for 11 months, and she delivered me deaf and dumb on January 18, 1968 at Imode Town, Ughelli, Delta State. As it is expected of every child to cry when they are born, but mine was different. I didn’t cry even my two hands where folded. They did everything humanly possible to ensure that I cried. My mother said the whole village gathered to initiate ideas on ways out. You can imagine a new born baby receiving a serious beating on his bottom just to ensure that I cry, yet I didn’t.”

    He said while the community gave up on him that he would amount to nothing, his mother stood by him until God intervened and opened his mouth.

    “It is God and my mother that kept me alive, because everybody had agreed to throw me into the forest but my mother insisted that she will accept me the way I am. But after three months when my mother was water-feeding me, she said amazingly I finally cried. So, when human effort fails, God starts working”.

  • Good time for orphans in Port Harcourt

    Good time for orphans in Port Harcourt

    Members of the Junior Chambers International (JCI), and Port Harcourt Chamber of Commerce, Industry, Mines and Agriculture (PHCCIMA), reached out to the less privileged members of the society to mark the Democracy Day in Port Harcourt, Rivers State.

    They visited the “Lifetime Orphanage and Vulnerable Children Home”, which was founded some 19 years ago by a retired commander, simply identified as Abadan, now elderly and inactive.

    The home was established to give helping hand to orphans and vulnerable children, with the founder having suffered the loss of both parents in a very tender age, is presently harbouring 58 children in a four bedroom apartment.

    The delegation from the International charity and business development organizations led by the Trans-Amadi chapter President of JCI, Ms Josephine Osigbeme and PHCCIMA President, Emeka Unachukwu defied the morning rains to visit the children who were visibly excited on seeing the visitors

    Osigbeme, shortly after the presenting food items for the upkeep of the children, explained that the visit would have been made two days earlier, May 27, ( Children day celebration), but had to take the advantage of the Democracy holiday to do it.

    She expressed concern over the poor environment the children are kept, but lauded the efforts of the founder of the home, a retired Army commander, Abadan for his good heart to give succour to the hopeless members of the society and said the group would liaise with PHCCIMA to improve on their well-being.

    “We look into the challenges of the less privileged and try to see how much and best we can assist them. We actually planned to embark on this outreach on the children’s day celebration to identify with them on their day but for some reasons it was moved to this day.

    “Before we made the choice of this Home we had gone on a survey of other homes in Port Harcourt and came to the conclusion that this particular centre actually needs assistance.

    “Apart from this visit, we have a yearly health sensitization programme tagged “nothing but net”, where we educate and distribute insecticide treated bed nets to rural dwellers, to enhance their health condition.

    “By what we’ve seen here today, we are definitely going to come back, just like the president of PHCCIMA, our partners in this project had earlier said, we are going to meet and come back, we’ve already informed them of our interest to be part of their 19th year anniversary next month and we hope to do more when we return. “she assured.

    “Corroborating the president, Dr. Felix Akubuenyi, Chairman of the planning committee, said the group had the past years been distributing 1000 pieces of insecticide nets to communities but said they have concluded plans to distribute between 1500 and 2000 pieces this year.

    “I appeal Nigerians to embrace service to humanity; it is the best work of life; because when you are serving humanity you are helping the next person. I encourage people to identify the less privilege in their neighbourhood and try and put smiles on their faces.”

    Also the National Executive vice president, area 2, comprising South-south/South-East, Aretha Faotu said the group is known for charitable activities and have gone on several charity outreaches in various communities across the state and also planned to visit the Nigerian prisons for sensitization and donation.

    Earlier the President of PHCCIMA, Emeka Unachukwu, had expressed gratitude on the policy of the Home, not giving out their children for adoption and pledged PHCCIMA’s readiness to partner with the Home, to develop the inmates.

    In his introduction earlier, the outreach coordinator/ Head of Education of the home, Mr. Nnordee Bariabara informed the visitors that the 19-year old Home presently has 58 inmates, 54 of them are in various levels of scholarship while the remaining four that have not got sponsors are receiving tutelage at the Home.

    Bariabara hinted of the Home’s plan to discharge in line with their policy the set of stipulates male children who are the pioneer inmates of the Home, having turned 18 years.

    The children offered all manner of prayers to God for their visitors especially prayers of long life, God’s protection and provision as well as guidance to their visitors.

  • Sharks’ Kayode Johnson set to win in Port Harcourt

    Sharks’ Kayode Johnson set to win in Port Harcourt

    Former Nigerian-born Qatar international Kayode Johnson now with Sharks Football Club of Port Harcourt is looking forward to an eventful season with the team after almost a decade sojourn in oil rich Qatar.

    Johnson, whose playing career in Qatar took him to teams like AL Gharafa Sports Club, Al-Ahli where he played alongside current Bayern Munich manager Pep Guardiola and Al Shamal Sports Club and as well as the Junior national team where he bagged a handful of goals in competitive games and the senior national team though in friendly capacity has also promised to bring his experience to bare in Sharks.

    The former Shooting Stars Sports Club of Ibadan attacker said playing in Qatar has taught him some lessons about the game which according to him will come handy when he gets the chance to play for Sharks this season.

    “Bros, 12 years in oil rich Qatar is no joke and you can only be trusted with a club jersey if you are good, though there were challenges initially I am happy I was able to weather the storm to get to where I am today through determination and commitment”, Johnson said.

    “And I want to contribute my experience to the progress of sharks in the league because as know the club is yet to win any major silverware since it was founded.”

    He praised the technical adviser of Sharks FC Gbenga Ogunbote for the excellent job he is doing in Port Harcourt attributing his coming to Sharks to the technical prowess of coach Ogunbote.

    “I must confess I am impressed with what coach Ogunbote is doing here, he is sound technically and his relationship with his players is second to none.”

    “To be candid if not for coach Ogunbote maybe I would not have been here, the man is just so down to earth I am not sure if his likes are many in the domestic scene”, Johnson added

    Kayode Johnson, who at some point in his career in Qatar was called Jamaal Johar, played his first match for Sharks in the one -nil loss to Gombe United at the Pantami stadium over the weekend.

  • Port Harcourt traders rue mysterious fire

    Port Harcourt traders rue mysterious fire

    There is no right time for a disaster to strike. But for grieving traders of Mile 1 Market in Diobu, Port Harcourt, the mysterious fire tragedy that hit the market on December 17, 2013 could not have come at a more inauspicious time.

    Dozens of them, in anticipation of brisk business during the Yuletide stocked their shops; scores borrowed from friends and relatives. Most of them went to banks, cooperative societies and money lenders, who gave them loans at shylock rates. Hoping that the profit from sales would more than offset the interests, the traders went about their businesses.

    It was when they were ready to reap the bounty of Christmas and New Year sales that the tragedy hit them. Nobody knew where the fire came from. The traders didn’t see it coming. When the smoked cleared, they had nothing but ashes on their hands and unsympathetic creditors breathing down their necks. Goods and cash worth several millions – some traders say billions – of naira were pulverised.

    When Niger Delta Report visited the scene the huge plume of smoke over the skyline mirrored the gloomy mood on the ground. There were tears and frustration everywhere as traders beheld their hard earned money, life time savings and most devastatingly, loans secured at cutthroat rates, some used life-time assets as collaterals, going up in smoke.

    Some of the traders and sympathizers who rushed to the scene as soon as they heard news of the fire watched helplessly as goods worth billions of naira burn to ashes. Quite a number of them were barely restrained from a suicidal jump into the fire.

    Over one month after when our reporter returned to the scene, the resilience of the typical Nigerian had returned for a few who mustered the courage to return. “Life must go on”, one of the traders told our reporter. Others were however still mourning the loss and ruing the cruel hand of fate in their lives.

    “Some of our colleagues have abandoned business are in search of alternative means of livelihood. Others have gone back to their villages. But me, I have no choice than to try and see how I can get my life going again. If a man falls he must rise again,” one of the traders said.

    Meanwhile, the challenge of getting up again is more daunting for some than others. Our findings revealed that the major challenge faced by a number of the unfortunate businessmen was how to repay the loans they took from banks to start their businesses or to prepare for the ‘Christmas rush’.

    Still, those who are picking the pieces of their lives again are contending with a number of challenges. Those who have managed to restart their business said it would take years for them to get to the stage they were before the setback.

    Chigozie Mba, who had returned back to his business, told our reporter that he borrowed N500,000 from bank to start his business. He noted that he was very lucky that didn’t take additional loan from bank to purchase Xmas goods like his follow traders did.

    “Many of our traders in this market are in a big problem of how to pay the money they collected from banks. Some of them are out of business at the moment. The only way some of them can pay their debts is to sell their properties or run to another bank for help. So it is not easy, the only luck I have was that I decided to manage the little money I had during Xmas period.”

    Mr. Ebenezer Chukwu was not as lucky. He lost N7million worth of goods to the mysterious fire last and he is licking his wounds.

    “My brother, God has been sustaining and encouraging me if not for friends I wouldn’t have started this little business this year. Of course the friend I am talking about did not dash me the money to begin this market. But I and my family have to survive, my children are out of school for now. My major problem now is how to pay the loan I took from bank, I have pleaded with my bankers to give me more time.

    “We are still waiting for government promises and we pray that they should come to our aid. Some of the traders who put all their money in business last year December before the fire tragedy are now in the village but I decided that I am not going anywhere , I know my God will assist me to pay all the debt I am owing.”

    While Chukwu was lucky to have shoulders of his friends to lean on, Chijioke Amajuoyi said the devastating fire incident opened his eyes to the reality of the world. He said it made him know that every man is for himself.

    “Nobody wants to sympathise with us; nobody wants to assist us even those who promised to assist us are yet to redeem their promises. Look at what I am selling; it was the same spot I was selling when I lost all my goods on the fire. We need help I didn’t borrow from bank like other big traders but my little goods that burnt here is as painful as that of those who lost millions. So I want corporate organisation and well meaning Nigerians to come to our aid it is not late, we are suffering.”

    The catalogue of woes was the same at the office of the Chairman of Mile 1 Market Traders Association, Deacon Kenneth Eze. He said all was not well with his members. But most painfully for him is that the incident may end the cosy relationship between the traders and their banks over the year.

    “The traders have been passing through serious hardship, because at the time the incident took place the traders have already borrowed money from banks and other money lending institutions to get goods for Xmas business. But at the end everything ended like that, so they are heavily indebted to banks.

    “I don’t think any bank will assist us again because the ones the traders borrowed they are yet to be paid and some of these traders presented their lands, houses and other valuable properties to banks before the loans were given to them. The banks are after their money if it were in the developed countries multinational companies operating in Rivers State would have come to our aids. But here nobody wants to assist us.”

    Deacon Eze slammed the National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) for turning its back on his members.

    He said: “ NEMA whose office is close to Mile 1 Market are yet to pay a special visit to see how they could assist the helpless traders. Instead they are busy refuting a rumour that we said they have not redeemed what they promised. If NEMA has promise anything to traders that could be good, NEMA never promised anything or sympathise to us before we could talk of redeeming. But we are calling on them to come to our aid they can still help us it is not late.

    “As for the traders I believe that as far as one is alive there is hope, they should be law abiding. Government has promise to rebuild the market I know they will do it. They have also given us a temporary place to do our business so by next ,week Mile 1 Market traders will be relocating to a temporary place provided by the Rivers State government.”

  • Twist in Port Harcourt ‘arms seizure’

    Twist in Port Harcourt ‘arms seizure’

    FOLLOWING the fears raised by the interception by operatives of State Security Services (SSS) of a 20-foot container laden high calibre ammunitions in Port Harcourt on Thursday, the Nigeria Customs Service, Area 1, Port Harcourt, Rivers State, has come out to say that the cargo was in transit to Uruguay. The Public Relations Officer of Area 1 Port, Port Harcourt, Sam Harry, who made the clarification yesterday while speaking with reporters, said the container was not designated for Port Harcourt Port, but was on its way to Uruguay. It will be recalled that security operatives intercepted the container said to be loaded with high calibre ammunition sat the port in the Rivers State capital. The captain of the vessel carrying the lethal cargo and six other crew members were arrested and taken to the Forces Avenue Office of the SSS, Port Harcourt, shortly after it arrived from Panama. The crew members were later detained and interrogated by the security operatives, while the container was guarded by the combined team of SSS, soldiers and policemen. According to Harry, “the container is not meant for Nigeria. It is on transit to Uruguay. There were no guns in the container. The body of the container was marked ‘exclusive’. It came along with another container that was stocked with pipes and materials meant for Eleme petrol chemical projects.” The customs’ spokesman also said that the container does not in any way constitute any harm or threat to the security of the country because the consignment was in transit to another country. “The container was in transit. It only passed through Port Harcourt port on the way to its final destination. So there is no cause to worry,” he stated, pointing out that the duty of the Nigeria Customs Services is to inspect consignment and peruse its papers before such consignment is cleared. Another source further confirmed that the vessel was conveying pipes with the container strapped on its platform when it anchored at the port. The pipes were being offloaded from the vessel when security operatives stormed the place, and orn

  • Port Harcourt prepares for World Book Capital

    Port Harcourt prepares for World Book Capital

    With the April 23 date for Port Harcourt to take over from Bangkok, Thailand as World Book Capital just four months away, the Rivers State government and the Rainbow Book Club are intensifying efforts to perfect activities that will feature during year-long programme.

    Port Harcourt beat Oxford (United Kingdom), Lyon (France), Ganja (Azerbaijan), Incheon (Republic of Korea), Moscow (Russian Federation), Pula (Croatia), Sharjah (United Ara Emirates ), Vilnus (Lithuania) and Yaoundé (Cameroun) to win the bid to be named the World Book Capital by United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO).

    Mrs Kolo Kalango, Project Director, Port Harcourt Word Book Capital 2014, said at a briefing in Lagos that most of the activities will focus on stimulating the youth to read.

    After the book capital year opens with international arts, culture and book exhibition, celebrities reading sessions with school children, inauguration of the Port Harcourt Book Centre during a week long programme, Mrs Kalango said other activities like the Reading Tree, Walking Book, and Book Clubs will feature intermittently throughout the year.

    Under the Reading Tree initiative, Kalango said pupils from 50 public and private primary schools in Rivers will read select local and foreign titles and win prizes as they make progress up the tree.

    The Walking Book will feature stories about local festivals written by junior secondary school pupils from unity schools across the country, while the Book clubs will engage senior secondary school pupils in reading and discussing pre-selected Nigerian authors on monthly basis.

    Mrs Kalango is optimistic about the impact the programmes will make on youths because of the positive feedback from the pilot editions rolled out since last October.

    She said: “Since October, we kicked off some pilot programmes to test them ahead of 2014 when we will roll them out full time. The Reading Tree (RT) is a scheme of graded reading for Primary 1-6 pupils. For the pilot, we worked with four schools. One of the things we do to measure impact is that we have a Measurement and Evaluation specialist to track progress. For children in Primary 4-6, we run a weekly book club to discuss the books. They fill a work book which contains questions and activities about the book they read. We want to prove that reading for pleasure can lead to academic excellence.”

    Beyond the book capital year, Mrs Kalango hopes that the Port Harcourt Book Centre, will become the hub of literary activities in Rivers State – like MUSON is for music in Lagos. She said the dream is for the centre to provide training for creative writing, have a well equipped library, host literary programmes and generate income from use of its facilities.

    For Port Harcourt to successfully host the World Book Capital until April 22, this year, Mrs Kalango urged President Goodluck Jonathan to make true his promise of support when he received the Rainbow Book Club and thanked them for bringing honour to Nigeria through the bid.

    She also urged private organisations and public-spirited individuals to join hands with the Rivers State government to implement all the programmes that have been lined up.