Tag: redemption

  • The Jump to inspire hope, redemption

    The Jump to inspire hope, redemption

    By Erinjogunola Femmy

    Author and filmmaker ‘Wale Adebayo has recently premiered his latest faith-based movie, The Jump, before a distinguished audience at The Lord’s Chapel of the Redeemed Christian Church of God (RCCG), Gbagada, Lagos.

    Directed by Buggie Felix, The Jump explores themes of redemption, hope, and the life-transforming power of God’s grace. The film follows a compelling journey of spiritual rebirth, designed to inspire and uplift viewers navigating challenging seasons of life.

    Read Also: Adeboye tasks Nigerians on trusting God

    Speaking at the premiere, Adebayo explained that the project emerged through divine direction. The Jump was produced under the inspiration of the Holy Spirit. Its core message highlights the unfailing grace of God for the hopeless,” he said, adding that the film seeks to strengthen believers’ understanding of God’s ability to restore.

    The event drew several dignitaries and film enthusiasts, including Pastor Olubunmi Babasola, Zonal Pastor of RCCG TLC, and his wife, Pastor (Mrs.) Funmi Babasola. Also present were Anthony Udom of Praxis Studios and members of the cast such as Eric Obinna and Ayodele Michael Babatunde.

    The premiere ended with prayers and commendations for Adebayo, as attendees expressed confidence that the movie will make a meaningful impact on audiences across Nigeria and beyond.

  • Connecting with your healing rights in redemption!

    Welcome to another exciting week. I hope you were blessed by the teaching of last week. Today, we shall focus on: Connecting with your Healing Rights in Redemption!

    From scriptures, we discover that at redemption, Christ paid for our healing, health and wholeness. For instance the Bible says: That it might be fulfilled which was spoken by Esaias the prophet, saying, Himself took our infirmities, and bare [our] sicknesses (Matthew 8:17; see also Isaiah 53:4-5; Jeremiah 33:6). This connotes that Jesus has already paid the price and thereby settled our wholeness for life. However, it is important to note that God’s healing virtue principally resides in His Word. The Bible records: And it came to pass on a certain day, as he was teaching, that there were Pharisees and doctors of the law sitting by, which were come out of every town of Galilee, and Judaea, and Jerusalem: and the power of the Lord was present to heal them (Luke 5:17). Apart from the battle against sin, the greatest battle against man is the battle on his health. Everything is on hold when our health is under attack and one of the ways we make an open show of the devil in this end-time is in our immunity to all manner of sicknesses and diseases. The Word is a power source and when we just lay by and not connected to it, it cannot impact on us. For instance, two pipes lying side by side cannot pass water from one to the other, because they have to be connected to each other before the water begins to flow. Likewise, how long we have been in a place does not matter but how connected we are. It was a word from Kenneth Hagin in 1979 that gave me my eternal authority over sickness. When I saw that Jesus took my infirmities in Matthew 8:17: That… Himself took our infirmities, and bare our sicknesses. I screamed, ‘Yea, I can never be sick’. Please understand that we cannot draw virtue without faith. It is written: And he said unto her, Daughter, be of good comfort: thy faith hath made thee whole; go in peace (Luke 8:48; see also Luke 6:17-19). So, virtue flows from the Word. Therefore, it is important to understand that violence of faith is our ticket to accessing all our inheritances in Christ.

    Also, we understand from scriptures that the Master Balm in Gilead is the Word of God. For it is written: …Is there no balm in Gilead; is there no physician there? why then is not the health of the daughter of my people recovered (Jeremiah 8:20-22; see also Psalm 107:20; Acts 10:38. Also, in Job 33:21-25, we saw how by revelation a terminal disease was destroyed. As it is written: His flesh is consumed away, that it cannot be seen; and his bones that were not seen stick out. Yea, his soul draweth near unto the grave, and his life to the destroyers. If there be a messenger with him, an interpreter, one among a thousand, to shew unto man his uprightness: Then he is gracious unto him, and saith, Deliver him from going down to the pit: I have found a ransom. His flesh shall be fresher than a child’s: he shall return to the days of his youth. We cannot be illuminated by the Word and still be dominated by darkness because spiritual illumination of the Word empowers us to dominate all activities of the powers of darkness including sicknesses and diseases (John 1:9; John 1:5). When we are lighted by the Word, we naturally dominate our circumstances.

    What, then, are the Virtues in the Word that Heals?

    • The Light of the Word: The light of the Word is one of the virtues that heal our bodies. As it is written: In him was life; and the life was the light of men. And the light shineth in darkness; and the darkness comprehended it not (John 1:4-5; see also Psalm 119:130). So, when the light of the Word enters us, it illuminates our inside and sends darkness packing (Job 33: 21-25).
    • As we feed on the Word, we are Feasting on Divine Nature: For it is written: Whereby are given unto us exceeding great and precious promises: that by these ye might be partakers of the divine nature, having escaped the corruption that is in the world through lust (2 Peter 1:4). Our systems are being divinised. Just as there are highly demonised people on the streets, in the same vein; there are highly divinised people who are just filled with God. The nature of God that dominates their lives by the Word makes them immune to sickness. It is written: Thy words were found, and I did eat them; and thy word was unto me the joy and rejoicing of mine heart: for I am called by thy name, O Lord God of hosts (Jeremiah 15:16; see also Proverbs 17:22).

    In summary, whatever is not done in faith is dead and cannot produce. However, to connect with the healing rights in Christ you must have a relationship with Him. That is, you must be born again. As it is written: … if any man be in Christ, he is a new creature: old things are passed away; behold, all things are become new (2 Corinthians 5:17). Are you born again? If you are not, this is an opportunity to do so. Simply say the following prayer: Lord Jesus, I come to You today. I am a sinner. Forgive me my sins. Cleanse me with Your precious Blood. Today, I accept You as my Lord and personal Saviour. Thank You Jesus for saving me! Now I know I am born again!” For further reading, please get my books: Walking in the Miraculous, Operating in the Supernatural, Releasing the Supernatural, Commanding the Supernatural and All you need to have all your needs met. I invite you to come and fellowship with us at the Faith Tabernacle, Canaanland, Ota, the covenant home of Winners. We have five services on Sundays, holding at 6:00 a.m., 7:50 a.m., 9:40 a.m., 11:30 a.m. and 1:20 p.m. respectively. I know this teaching has blessed you. Write and share your testimony with me through: Faith Tabernacle, Canaanland, Ota, P.M.B. 21688, Ikeja, Lagos, Nigeria; or call 01-4548070, 01-4548280; or E-mail: feedback@lfcww.org; Face book: www.facebook.com/davidoyedepoministries/;  Twitter: @DavidOyedepoMin

  • ‘Nigeria not beyond redemption’

    Nigeria is redeemable despite the myriad of socio-economic challenges confronting it, National Vice President of The Apostolic Church Nigeria (TACN) Pastor Emmanuel Awojide has said.

    “Nigeria is not beyond redemption. It is a matter of time and season. All the killings and challenges we see today will soon become history.

    “There is hope for Nigeria if we stand together and cry to God for intervention,” he stressed.

    The cleric pleaded with Nigerians not to give up on the country, saying things would soon improve massively.

    He said Nigeria will not break despite the many threats to its corporate existence by warmongers.

    Awojide spoke when he visited headquarters of Vintage Press Limited, publisher of The Nation titles, ahead of the church’s centenary celebration.

    He urged government and security agencies to work towards halting the bloodshed and bring the perpetrators to book.

    Awojide also sued for peace, urging all to shun violent reactions and conducts. Working together, according to him, will obliterate the seemingly many differences in the country.

    The cleric said the church, established by a group of prayer warriors with firm belief in holiness and righteousness in 1918, has come a way long with vital spiritual and humanitarian contributions to the country.

    The church, according to him, has continued in the tradition of commitment to the core values of its founding fathers with vigorous evangelism.

    He mentioned the church-founded Samuel Adegboyega University (SAUO) Edo State; private cable station Glorious Vision TV (GVTV) and a proposed 500 megawatts solar power project with Israeli partners as some of the recent strides of the church.

    Vice President Yemi Osinbajo will be the special guest of honour at the centenary celebration billed for August 5 at the Ketu LAWNA territory premises of the church.

    To commemorate the occasion, a special crusade is billed for October 10-14 in Uyo, which Awojide said will enable the church demonstrate its commitment to soul-winning.

  • Understanding our New Dawn Heritage in Redemption!

    Understanding our New Dawn Heritage in Redemption!

    Welcome to this great month of February! I pray that things that eyes have not seen, nor ears heard shall become the order of the day in our lives in Jesus name! Today, we shall focus on ‘Understanding our New Dawn Heritage in Redemption!’

    We must recognise that understanding is important to accessing our heritage in the Kingdom. The truth is: It is one thing to read or hear but an entirely a different thing to see; but only those who see possess their inheritance in God. Therefore, we must set ourselves to see mysteries from God’s Word. Remember, until we have understanding of any scripture, the benefits are not released to us. Hence, it takes understanding to connect to the virtues in the Word. Once understanding comes alive, miracles are inevitable.

    The Ethiopian Eunuch in Acts 8 was reading from Isaiah 53, but he did not understand what he was reading until Philip, moved by the Holy Ghost, asked him, Understandest thou what thou readest? Philip opened him up to the benefits of that scripture. And as soon as he understood what Philip was saying, he said: See, here is water, what doth hinder me to be baptized? It is important to understand that every truth of Scripture is valid for all times but applicable only to those who are interested. By redemption, we are members of the household of God; a new dawn family. When we are saved, old things are passed away, all things are become new. Therefore if any man be in Christ, he is a new creature: old things are passed away; behold, all things are become new (2 Corinthians 5:17). That is, when we are baptised unto Jesus, you are empowered to live and walk in the newness of life.). Now therefore ye are no more strangers and foreigners, but fellow citizens with the saints, and of the household of God (Ephesians 2:19).

    From scriptures, we discover that redemption changes our stories and ushers us into a completely new life. This implies that we are now members of the household of God which is a “New Dawn” Family (2 Corinthians 5:17; Ephesians 2:19).

    But, what then is New Dawn?

    According to scriptures, New Dawn connotes a life:

    • Where new things never cease happening  (Isaiah 42:7-9, 43:18-19; Malachi 3:6)
    • Where we continue to experience the strange works and strange acts of God as a way of life (John 3:8; Isaiah 28:21-22)
    • Where new doors continue to open to us (Isaiah 45:1-3; Revelation 3:7)
    • Where we continue to experience a change of story:
    • Where we go from strength to strength and from glory to glory (Psalm 73:1, 84:7; 2 Corinthians 3:18)
    • A life where things that eyes have not seen nor ears heard are the order of the day (1Corinthians 2:9-10)
    • Where we experience new things:
    • Year in year out (Psalm 65:11; Luke 13:6-9)
    • Month after month (Revelation 22:1; Isaiah 61:3)
    • Day in day out (Psalm 23:3, 68:19; Lamentations 3:22-23)
    • A family where every day is Christmas (Psalm 23:6, 33:18-19, 132:13-16)

    In addition, we have a New Dawn root in God the Father, the God of new things, who said: Remember ye not the former things, neither consider the things of old. Behold, I will do a new thing (Isaiah 43:18-19). Also, it is written: The former things have come to pass, new thing do I declare (Isaiah 42:8-9). Remember, God also said, I am the Lord, I Change not.  God is still doing new things in the lives of His people today (Malachi 3:6).  Moreover, we also have a New Dawn root in Jesus Christ our Lord and Saviour, whose mission on earth was and is still characterised by new and strange things, as we saw people exclaimed concerning Him:

    • We never saw it on this fashion (Mark 2:12)
    • We have seen strange things to day! (Luke 5:26)
    • What manner of man is this? (Mark 8:27)

    Remember, also that Jesus is the same, yesterday, today and forever (Hebrews 13:8).

    Furthermore, we have a New Dawn root in the Apostles, who manifested strange works and strange acts in their ministries.

    • They unveiled mysteries that were hidden for ages (Ephesians 3:1-5/8-11)
    • Peter’s shadow healed the sick (Acts 5:15)
    • Paul and Barnabas were called ‘gods’ in the likeness of men (Acts 14:11)
    • They preached strange things and commanded strange results (Acts 17:16-21)

    As we all know, the church is built on the foundation of Apostles and Prophets, so we have our foundation in strange works and strange acts (Ephesians 2:20).

    Above all, we are in the last days which are the ‘New Dawn’ era of the Church of Christ on earth; the era of new and strange things (Joel 2:28-29; Zechariah 8:20-23). We understand from scriptures that the wave shall be so strange that it shall be spoken against by many people; but nothing shall be able to stop it (Joel 1:1-11; Acts 28:22; Isaiah 28:21-22).

    However, new birth is the access of anyone to this “New Dawn” family (2 Corinthians 5:17; Romans 6:4).

    Are you born again? If you are not, this is an opportunity to do so. Simply say the following prayer: Lord Jesus, I come to You today. I am a sinner. Forgive me my sins. Cleanse me with Your precious Blood. Today, I accept You as my Lord and personal Saviour. Thank You Jesus for saving me! Now I know I am born again!” For further reading, please get my book: Exploring the Riches in Redemption. I invite you to come and fellowship with us at the Faith Tabernacle, Canaanland, Ota, the covenant home of Winners. We have five services on Sundays, holding at 6:00 a.m., 7:50 a.m., 9:40 a.m., 11:30 a.m. and 1:20 p.m. respectively. I know this teaching has blessed you. Write and share your testimony with me through: Faith Tabernacle, Canaanland, Ota, P.M.B. 21688, Ikeja, Lagos, Nigeria; or call 01-4548070, 01-4548280; or E-mail: feedback@lfcww.org; or www.facebook.come/davidoyedepoministries/or Twitter:@Davidoyedepomin

  • Redemption from recession

    •Economic realities must now align with positive statistics

    President Muhammadu Buhari’s cautiously optimistic reaction to the news that Nigeria had emerged from the recession which hit it in late 2015 demonstrates a welcome recognition of the fact that a lot more work has to be done to put the nation’s economy on a truly sustainable footing.

    The National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) declared that the economy grew by 0.55 per cent in the second quarter of 2017, after five successive quarters of contraction.

    The development was attributed to improvements in several sectors, most notably the oil sector, which recorded 1.64 per cent of growth in the second quarter of 2017, compared to -15.60 per cent in the first quarter of the year.

    The non-oil sector grew by 0.45 per cent in the second quarter of 2017, building upon 0.72 per cent growth recorded during the first quarter. Agriculture grew by 3.01 per cent during the second quarter of 2017, as did manufacturing, which grew by 0.64 per cent during the second quarter of the year, improving on the 1.36 per cent rise of the first quarter. Growth was also seen in solid minerals, and electricity and gas.

    Heart-warming as it is, Nigeria’s exit from recession does not automatically imply entry into prosperity for the majority of its citizens. Many of the basic challenges which caused economic contraction in the first place are still largely unsolved, especially the infrastructure deficit, inflation, interest rates and high unemployment.

    If the country is to build upon the encouraging economic signs on the horizon, it has no option other than to tackle its infrastructural challenges decisively. Without a viable transport system, reliable power and water, and well-planned towns and cities at the minimum, it will be difficult to transform positive statistics into clearly-perceived economic growth.

    Resolving the vexed issue of power is particularly important. Nigeria reached 4,158 megawatts in April 2017, an achievement which is extremely inadequate for a nation of about 170 million, and is still beset by challenges of transmission, distribution and costing. Inadequate power supply is a drawback which has negative effects on industry, small-scale businesses and the efficient provision of services.

    Closely allied to this is the vital need to make the country’s agricultural sector more modern and efficient. As the largest contributor to the country’s gross domestic product, and the biggest employer of labour, it is crucial that the sector is better able to deliver staple foods to markets, provide raw material for industry, wean the citizenry off imported agricultural products, and become a viable career option.

    Nigeria’s stubbornly high interest and inflation rates also require attention if economic growth is to become truly sustainable. Combined with persistently high foreign exchange rates, they conspire to make the cost of doing business in the country much higher than it should be.

    Government must move away from the mechanical celebration of data which is all too often disconnected from palpable changes in the lives of ordinary citizens. As President Buhari implied, the most positive economic numbers in the world are meaningless if they do not correspond with actual improvements in the well-being of the majority.

    The country’s economic managers must continue to ensure that all components of the Economic Growth and Recovery Plan (EGRP) are implemented in accordance with laid-down timelines. The various interventions and initiatives enumerated in the plan should be closely monitored and fine-tuned as the need arises.

    It is particularly important that public office-holders re-commit themselves to the hard work and self-sacrifice that are essential to a successful turnaround of the economy; declining to convene Federal Executive Council meetings allegedly because of public holidays runs counter to that spirit.

  • Aba: Redemption for a flooded city

    Aba: Redemption for a flooded city

    Renowned for its infrastructural decay, as for its commercial success, Aba, Abia State’s money-spinning city, may be nearing the end of its flooding nightmare. SUNNY NWANKWO reports

    Aba’s infrastructural rot once drew tears, in the 80s, from Chief Sam Mbakwe, then governor of Old Imo State, of which present-day Abia State was part. After a heavy downpour, residents of a part of the commercial town found over 50 of their houses not only submerged but washed off into a ditch deep enough to take up a seven-storey building.

    Governor Mbakwe soon heard what happened and took it up with then president Alhaji Shehu Shagari. The President came to Aba and promised to reclaim the waterlogged areas. He kept the promise. Since then other administrations have made some efforts to keep Aba above water. Most failed, otherwise residents of the state’s commercial nerve would not be as depressed as they are about their infrastructural challenges.

    It seems there is hope, for Governor Okezie Ikpeazu has awarded the contract to rework parts of the city that are heavily affected by the floods. His plan is to turn Faulks-Brass Road into a dual-carriageway.  For that to happen, much of the area will be de-flooded, and that will bring a lot of relief to residents and traders at the nearby popular Ariaria Market.  He is also paying attention to other parts of the commercial city.

    On countless occasions, traders at Ariaria International market Aba, especially those at A Line recorded losses which forced many to close shop during the rainy season. A shop owner who pleaded not to be named, told our reporter that they had to buy rainboots to wade through the dirty water and arrange with their customers over the phone where they would deliver the customers’ goods as the market was flooded.

    Several attempts have been made by past administrations in the state to address the situation of flood in Ariaria, Faulks Road and the dreaded “Ukwu Mango” but the situation has remained the same.

    Governor Ikpeazu not only awarded the contract for the rehabilitation and reconstruction of Faulks Road to Setraco Construction Company but also followed up the progress of work on Brass, Faulks and Ifeobara Pond from where it is expected that the storm water will be moved to the Aba River.

    Ikpeazu speaking to newsmen at the end of an inspection of work on Faulks Road and Ifeobara Pond said, “We are taking advantage of the dry season window. It is now imperative that we monitor them to make sure that they achieve the milestone we desire so we can put enough to stock for the dry season. I think they are doing well. Construction in this part of Nigeria [requires you to be] careful about how you plan your site so that you don’t lose the mileage you have achieved when the rains come because the rains will come certainly. This is the time for us to tie up our ends. We’ve just done about one-third of what we have at hand to do. There are projects in Umuahia, others in Abia North; we want our contractors at their best to do what they are supposed to do.

    The governor spoke about specific areas of focus.

     

    On Ifeobara basin

    “The Ifeobara basin is a natural basin for storm water in this environment. What you saw that people built up around here took up part of this Ifeobara pond and the thing continued to constitute until water began to overflow up to Uratta and Omuma roads. So, we are trying to recover the area of this Ifeobara pond and ensure that we retain water to its full capacity and also prepare to pump overflow from Ifeobara to waterside. That’s why the entire design of Ifeobara pond and Faulks road encapsulates or has within it the capacity to pump overflowing water from Ifeobara down to waterside.

     

    Keeping drainage from being blocked

     

    “What concerns us today is that most buildings in Aba don’t even have facilities for toilets and bathrooms. They pipe their water straight onto the roads thereby undermining the quality and reduce the lifespan of the roads. We are not going to allow that. We are preparing to engage people. We solicit the help of the press and the public to enlighten people that if you have a building without toilet and bathroom, and you are piping bathroom water to the road, it is only a recipe for epidemic; it is also not socially good. And infrastructurally, we are borrowing to do some of these things; we don’t want them to go back within the life of this administration. I will assure that we have the will to enforce these things that will protect our infrastructure.

     

    Port Harcourt Road

    “PH Road is a federal government road; unfortunately there are no federal citizens. So, we are touched. Initially, you are aware that we have been waiting for ADB to give us facility to go into that road and give it the kind of touch we are giving to Faulks road and other areas. But the thing is delaying; we are almost marking our second year anniversary. We think that because of the strategic nature of PH road where they manufacture machine tools and fabrication, to bring them to support our battle for the growth of SMEs in our environment, we look into PH road at this time. And going there shows that we have developed interest. I have asked some good contractors to look at it. Very soon, we will advertise that road. We will do it.

     

    Economic importance of the road project

    “If you have been following our strategy for development, we are running on five pillars of development. The first is trade and commerce and SMEs, you can see that our priority roads are the ones that either lead to the markets or give access to the market or give access to the SME centres. And Faulks road is an example; you can talk about access to Ariaria market. 60% of those who come to Abia State from outside visit Ariaria, that’s why for the passerby, the Aba indigenes, visitors and people coming for economic reasons, Faulks road is the key. Then, the cost of roads we are doing at Amamong, that’s where the shorts, gowns, shirts and pants. So, what we are doing is it to enhance the economic activities going on in that area.

     

    Complaints by landlords of demolished buildings 

    “You will be entitled to compensation if you have title documents. If not your compensation will only come from heaven. The people who erected structures in that area were not supposed to do so.”

    That is why we are where we are now and then draw milestones for where we will like to be in April because we are funding our contractors heavily from this month so as to take full advantage of the dry season window which is just a few weeks ahead and it is now imperative that we monitor them on day-to-day basis to make sure that they achieve the milestone that we desire so that we can put enough in stock for the dry season. I think that they are doing well. Construction in this part of Nigeria requires that you must be careful about how you plan your site so that you don’t lose the mileage that you have achieved when the rains come because the rains will certainly come. And that is why it is important for us to tie up our ends going forward. This is going to be regular than before. We just toured 1/3 of what we have to do today. There are projects that are as active as this in Umuahia, Abia North and we want to make sure that our contractors are at their best doing what they are supposed to do.

     

    Brass Street

    I am impressed by what the contractor is doing at Brass and Ifeobara Basin. Setraco is a very experienced hand and they work strictly according to specification. I think that our vision to do world class road leading into Ariaria and opening up to Aba-Port Harcourt Expressway is beginning to yield fruit. brass is looking like what it is supposed to be, which is a major access to Ariaria and I think that I am excited and I just hope and pray they will continue in that direction.

     

  • New dawn in Ondo: Journey to redemption

    New dawn in Ondo: Journey to redemption

    HUMBLEDby the uncommon kindness of the Almighty God and an unequivocal expression of preference by the good people of Ondo State, exemplified by the victory of our great party at the last gubernatorial election, I am extremely delighted to share with you all the joy of this day of glory.We are grateful to Almighty God for granting this state such a beautiful day and a beautiful moment like this.

    I thank the President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria and leader of our great party, President Muhammadu Buhari GCFR, for his leadership and unwavering stance to support what is just and noble. Today’s celebration would, perhaps, have been impossible without his steely disposition to always stand against all acts not in consonance with decency, probity and justice. I thank the President of Senate, Dr. Bukola Saraki and the Speaker of the House of Representatives Hon. Yakubu Dogara. I thank all APC Governors who stood to be counted with us in our hour of need andother eminent Nigerians too numerous to mention. An especial reverence must be reserved for our indefatigable party chairman, Chief John Odigie Oyegun, whose strict adherence to lofty principles and doggedness laid the foundation for our resounding victory at the polls.

    This exemplary leader behaved like a true elder, whose sagely presence in the village square not only professed rectitude but acted it, resolutely, affirming nobility of the human spirit. Our party benefitted, tremendously, from his vast experience in public service. We are eternally grateful. The verdict of history shall be kind to him. We express our profound appreciation to all the leaders of the party, at the national, state, local government, ward and unit levels, for their untiring and selfless efforts during the election. May I also use this opportunity to pay tribute to those who have served this state in this capacity, both living and departed, for their invaluable contributions to the development of the state. On behalf of our State, I pay tribute to Governor OlusegunAbdulramanMimiko for his several years of service toOndo State. I thank all our guests and friends both far and near who have taken it upon themselves to be here or sent words.

    I thank all citizens of Ondo state, particularly our resilient youths and women. I come to you this day, with a message of hope, a clear agenda of prosperity and a vision of life abundant. I believe the greatest expression of faith in our ability is to be strong enough to look upon our imperfections and decide that it is in our power to remake our society to align with our highest ideals. We can rise out of this dust and build a new Ondo state where honesty, prosperity and confidence can once again be our self-identity. We can pull ourselves by the bootstraps and shake off our current frustrations and disappointments. We must recognise the need for a cohesive platform, indispensable to an effective and efficient implementation of policies and programmes of both government and party, respectively. Divergence of opinions is integral to party politics.

    We are bound to disagree as politicians but we must cast aside bitter recriminations and destructive predilections. Democracy thrives on infinite multiplicity of ideas. Popular participation is one of its fundamental norms. The subordination of individual preferences for the collective will is essential if we are to avoid anarchy. Party supremacy should be respected at all times. This should not be difficult for us to accept if we are truly desirous of bringing about positive change in the lives of our people. We listened to the voices of our people in the course of our campaigns to all the nooks and crannies of the state.

    We heard themloud and clear through their votes. We witnessed, first hand, the deplorable conditions under which they exist. To those who cast their ballots in favour of our programmes, your trust is not misplaced. We are determined to make the difference with the specific mandate of redemption liberally handed over to us. Those who expressed other preferences are no less patriotic. Before long their anxieties will be addressed, realistically. All of us will be involved in the reconstruction project. The collective interest of the state must be our paramount focus. Consequently,we stand before you to pledge, with the guidance of God and our resolve not to renege on our promise, that your welfare shall form the basis of all our activities.

    To achieve this, the main mission of our administration is therefore to lead a patriotic, highly inspired and competent team to rescue the ship of our state. We intend to help rebuild our economy, resuscitate damaged infrastructure, restore hope and return our state to a prosperous land. We are determined as an administration to break down the barriers that have made stagnation possible. We will break down the barriers to honest leadership, to comprehensive development, to physical growth and social security.

    These we intend to do through the promotion of transparent leadership, rule of law, extensive consultation, quality and accessible public utilities and social security; all in a sustainable manner. We acknowledge the enormous challenges faced by the state and the severely limited resources available to meet these ever-increasing and compelling demands. In readiness for this enormous task ahead, I have two months ago inaugurated a Strategic Development and Policy Implementation Committee comprising of eminent and very knowledgeable Nigerians to produce and articulate a compressive change policy and programme blueprint.

    They have since submitted their preliminary report. This blueprint is anchored on five cardinal programmes, which are popularly known as our Platforms for Change (JMPPR). These are: 1. Job creation through Agriculture, Entrepreneurship and Industrialisation. 2. Massive Infrastructural development and maintenance. 3. Provision of functional Education and Technological growth. 4. Provision of Accessible and Qualitative Health care and social service delivery. 5. Rural Development and Community Extension services.

    This platform for Change is erected on strong pillars, which consist of the core sectors of government activities that our blueprint lays emphasis on. These are Finance and Management of state resources, Health and Social Services, Infrastructure and Public utilities, Agriculture and Natural resources, Commerce and Industrial development, Education and Technology, Land, Housing and Environment, Women Affairs and Social Development, Youth and Sports development, Culture and Tourism as well as Information, Civic orientation and Mobilisation among others.

    Our blueprint when unveiled shall explain in details our philosophy, vision, sectoral policies and comprehensive Programmes of action clearly calendared over a period of a tenure of four years. With this document our pact with the people will be clear, our path well defined and expectations clearly understood. In building the structure to deliver on our campaign promises, I come to you with a clear mind and an honest heart, to serve and give the very best of my ability to restore Hope and Happiness to our people. I urge you to see hope the way I see it. I see hope with limitless boundaries for endless opportunities for all of us.

    I see hope for progress, stability and prosperity for all people of goodwill who are willing to contribute their quota to developing our state to a land of honourable, contented, smart, honest, diligent and patriotic people. I see hope for self-confidence, job security and increased commerce and economic production. I see hope for redemption and renewal of our broken infrastructure, and social values. But make no mistake about it; our journey to redemption will not be without stress and undulating curves. There are mountains before us to climb. As we climb up these steep mountains. Sometimes we may trip or slip, we will get back up. We will focus on the journey.

    We will never stop. We will never stop. We will never stop. In the end we will reach our goal, which is to bring back jobs to our youths, food to families, safety, confidence and prosperity to this land. For all these to happen, I am humbly going to ask ONLY one thing from you, good people of Ondo state. What I ask for is Attitude. We need to come with an attitude of belief and transformation. Indeed, in all successful cultures and societies, attitude is the spirit and driver of victory. Ladies and gentlemen, for us to see the change we all desire, we must be ready to constitute ourselves into change evangelists with exceptional missionary zeal to succeed. We must know that the man in the mirror is you and I. We need to have faith and find courage in the words of the good scripture thatsays, “Those who hope in the Lord will renew their strength. They will soar on wings like eagles.

    They will run and not grow weary. They will walk and not be faint.” I believe if we combine these abilities with the force of Providence, a lot of great deeds will happen. We shall not subject ourselves to any specious and unproductive stereotypes, which find expression in the usual egregious celebration of the passage of time spent in office as achievement. We will be too busy to notice the pace of the itinerary of the administration. Our state is particularly lucky. We have men and women of quality. We set the pace for others in the not too distant past. The country depended, to a very great extent, on our resourcefulness. We contributed, immensely, to the GDP of the country at a time when agriculture was the mainstay of the country’s economy.

    Our people were exemplars in virtually all fields of human endeavour. The story is, painfully, different today. The fault, as the saying goes, is not in our stars but in ourselves that our fortunes have dwindled, considerably, and we have become underlings. We have transited, regrettably, from a producing economy to a basically consumptive society, which depends, almost solely, on handouts to survive. The resultant effect of this unproductive attitude is grinding poverty, desperation and hopelessness among our people.

    It is a cruel irony that a state, richly endowed in material and human resources, wallows in inexplicable privation. Our unproductive taste has sustained the dichotomy between the rural areas and the urban centres. All attempts at improving infrastructural deficits seem concentrated at the capital of the state. Government intervention, where available, has been grossly inadequate in addressing the socio-economic challenges faced by the masses. Our administration shall, decidedly, try to close the gap between the hinterland and urban centres. Real development can only be actualized and accentuated through an active symbiosis between the two, an understanding predicated on collaboration and co-existence designed for amity and progress.

    Our people will be encouraged to participate in the massive reconstruction contemplated by our administration in this regard. Any honest indigene of the state must be disturbed by the crisis in the educational sector at present. The philosophy of education, conceived on the idea of functionality for improved living by our forbears, has been reduced to a routine certification ritual, the culmination of which is the award of certificates, diplomas and degrees to graduates who are left more confused than when they enrolled in school.

    The unemployment crisis, apart from being a global socioeconomic phenomenon, is self-inflicted. If education is the nurturing, training and mobilization of those who live in a society to confront the challenges of development, faced, primarily, by the people in that environment, the current situation confirms that we have since departed from that well-trodden path for a very long time now.It is a big shame that a state, which was a clear leader in education in the country, now lags behind. It appears that our curricula at all levels of training have failed to produce experts whose contributions to the growth of the economy are needed. Our administration will strive to reverse this unfortunate trend by promoting functional education aimed at real development.

    We shall also revisit the issue of vocational training with a view to improving the skills of our artisans. We recognize that the issue of unemployment is endemic. We equally understand that the greatest employer of labour, at a time such as this challenging period, is the private sector. The government will ensure that the environment remains peaceful and conducive for economic activities. In addition, we shall deploy considerable energy into agriculture. Through this, we hope to generate employment for the teeming youths.

    This administration will do everything possible to encourage investment in agriculture. Our youths must be ready for training necessary to kick-start this mission. We must begin to deemphasize white-collar jobs. The era of unproductive civil service is winding to a close, gradually.

    The current economic realities make the deployment of the unemployed to other sectors, other than agriculture and rural development, unsustainable. We must train our youths to acquire entrepreneurial skills as a corollary to our programme on agriculture. The health care delivery system currently operating in the state will be sustained and improved upon. We shall adopt a deliberate policy to ensure that our people have access to health care regardless of their social status. We intend, within the available resources, to provide qualitative primary health care delivery system to the rural populace.

    Health care centres in the rural areas will be accessible and functional. Our policy on massive infrastructural development will seek to open up the hinterland through our roads and waterways. Our state has the longest coastline in the country. It is unthinkable that all economic activities are restricted to land while our waterways are abandoned. Opening up the hinterland will reduce, drastically, the perennial rural-urban drift and encourage our sons and daughters who live outside the state to consider returning home to contribute their own quota.

    The economic propensities of such a venture will be, unimaginably, exponential. We are all witnesses to the negative impact that our local economy has been subjected to as a result of over-reliance on federally allocated funds for even the most basic recurrent expenditure items. It is high time that we looked inwards and come up with a solution that ensures we are sustainable and viable as a collective entity.

    We shall develop a comprehensive Development Plan that focuses on leveraging our collective resources and areas of comparative advantage for the benefit of our people. The plan will detail our philosophy and response to surviving in this harsh economic climate. In addition to this, it will also take a medium term view to our economic development on an overall basis, and more importantly ensure that we remain consistently above board during economic booms and bursts.

    We will adopt a collaborative approach to get this done by ensuring that we engage with the other segments of the public sector, as well as the private sector in developing and implementing our ideas of transforming the economy of our great State within the shortest possible period. All these lofty aspirations will remain a mirage if those saddled with the responsibility of implementing the decisions of the government do not support with dedication, honesty and patriotism. I acknowledge the very important role that the Civil Service has played, and continues to play in the development of our beloved State. I understand the challenges, and these are quite apparent to those within and outside the system. We will work towards addressing these challenges in delivering on our mandate to our people. We particularly seek the support and cooperation of the Civil Service and all organs of labour.

    We will drive efficiency through capacity building and training needs assessment targeted at retooling our civil servants. Be rest assured that your welfare, training, capacity building and the overall interests of our people will be one of the highest pillars of our mandate. We acknowledge the constraints that our current financial situation will place on our ability to deliver on our mandate. We however, believe that an adequate focus on transforming the current socioeconomic status of our State will lead to substantial internally generated revenue for our State.

    We believe that Ondo State has the required resources – human and material to ensure our sustainability in the short, medium and long term. We are looking at building on our existing relationships with local and international development partners. Many of them have been there for us in the time past, and we reach out to them, especially at the new dawn in the administration of our State.I am therefore using this opportunity to reach out to businesses, manufacturers, private investors as well as potential international partners. You are welcome to Ondo State. We commit to partner with you in developing the economic potentials of our State for the benefit of all our stakeholders. The collective deployment of our resources, combined with those of our neighboring and sister States cannot be over-emphasized.

    Our administration believes that we can achieve a lot more if we work with a number of our sister State Governments to ensure that certain development efforts (infrastructure or otherwise) are channeled in such a way as to deliver maximum benefits for the participating States. We believe we don’t have to build or develop everything ourselves. There is a lot we can gain if we harmonise efforts and resources to build enduring assets that can cater for the needs of every one of us. Security of lives and property shall be guaranteed.

    Our administration will protect all and sundry. We will act in the interest of everyone. We will be there for all. All those who will add value to governance in the state shall be engaged. We believe that the inputs and participation of every stakeholder is required for us to succeed and deliver our mandate. We will provide numerous avenues for direct engagement with our people. Whether you are civil servants, market women, students, vulnerable groups, artisans, professionals, we will have specific means of reaching out to you to feel your pulse, and more importantly to seek inputs into programs and policies that will directly impact your lives.

    Ladies and gentlemen, it is indeed a brand new day! With the assistance of the Almighty God and the good people of Ondo State, we hope to take the state out of the morass of privation, hopelessness and desperation. The welfare of our people shall be the fundamental objective and directive principle of governance in Ondo State. Your Excellencies, My lords, ladies and gentlemen and my good people of Ondo state, the hour is here and our Journey to Redemptioncommences now. And to God Almighty, the creator of heaven and earth, the author and finisher of all things perfect and excellent I say: “Forth in thy name oh Lord I go, my daily labour to pursue, thee only thee resolved to know, in all I think or speak or do. The task thy wisdom has assigned o’ let me cheerfully fulfil in all my works thy presence find and prove thy acceptable will”. Long live Ondo State, Long Federal Republic of Nigeria.

  • UBA opts for early redemption of seven-year N20b bond

    UBA opts for early redemption of seven-year N20b bond

    The board of directors of United Bank for Africa (UBA) Plc has decided to exercise the call option for the early redemption of the bank’s seven-year N20 billion bond, issued in October 2010. The bond has a tenor of seven years with 13 per cent fixed rate coupon. The tenor of the bond ordinarily ends in 2017.

    The bank’s directors said they would be exercising their rights to redeem the bond earlier than its full redemption period.

    Under the terms and conditions of the Trust Deed, UBA reserves the rights to early redemption from the fifth year anniversary of the bond, being September 2015.

    The board assured that the bank has adequate liquidity to meet the proposed early redemption, noting that the exercise of this call option has relatively no impact on the liquidity and capital of the bank.

    A new helmsman, Mr. Kennedy Uzoka, last Monday took over as the substantive group managing director at the UBA. The Tony Elumelu-led board of UBA had in March 2016 announced the appointment of Uzoka, a former group deputy managing director, subject to the approval of the apex bank.

    Uzoka has most recently been leading the transformation agenda of the bank, after returning from completing the Advanced Management Programme of Harvard Business School. Uzoka has over two and half decades of experience in commercial banking, strategy and business transformation.

    Prior to his sabbatical at Harvard, Uzoka served as Deputy Managing Director, UBA group and was also the CEO of UBA Africa, responsible for the Group’s operations in 18 countries across Africa. The new GMD is a graduate of Mechanical Engineering from University of Benin and holds a Masters Degree in Business Administration from University of Lagos.

    The new GMD had already given a glimpse of the underlying vision and strategies of his leadership at the first generation bank.

    Uzoka has said the bank under him will remain committed to sustainably delivering superior returns to shareholders in excess of their expectations.

    He outlined that the bank’s African subsidiaries are growing stronger and the group has a target to increase Africa’s contribution to the group’s profit to over 25 per cent in 2016 from 24 per cent in 2015.

  • Senate in Search for Redemption

    It is apparent that the 8th Senate of the Federal Republic is on a redemptive mission to salvage whatever is left of its battered image. The legislative chamber late last week ate the humble pie and reversed itself on some of the giddy measures it had set onto, which reeked of legislative brigandage. The coming days will show whether the chamber’s back-pedalling was sincere enough, and not too little too late in the day.

    The Senate had carried on, to the consternation of many Nigerians, as if the weighty task of lawmaking was a gutter fight motivated by the ongoing trial of Senate President Bukola Saraki before the Code of Conduct Tribunal (CCT). On the heels of a ruling early last week by the chairman of the tribunal, Justice Danladi Umar, that he would henceforth hold day-long sittings everyday to try the Saraki case that had dragged forever since last year, the Ethics, Privileges and Public Petitions Committee of the Senate issued a summons on the same judge to appear before it “unfailingly” by 2p.m. on Thursday. Well, seriously?! The time scheduled for Umar’s appearance before the Senate committee conflicted flagrantly with the trial routine he had already made public. And so, the timing and coincidence of that summons were obvious even to a nincompoop as retaliatory against the tribunal judge and targeted at frustrating the Senate President’s trial. Discerning citizens and interest groups, of course, tackled the Senate over the summons and counselled that the tribunal judge should ignore it. Not that anyone thought it was it was helpful for our emerging democracy that legislative authority should be defied. But the legislative chamber, by the summons, undermined its own legislative dignity. It was thus in enlightened self-interest that the Senators, two days later, stepped down the invitation to Umar.

    The chairman of the summoning Senate committee, Senator Samuel Anyanwu, was reported as saying the legislative chamber reconsidered because the tribunal judge wrote in to officially ask for an extension of time. But, trust me, the legislative chamber is better off letting the matter lie, because it cannot at this time conduct any probe the tribunal judge that would have any shred of credibility. Isn’t there something generally known as ‘conflict of interest’? In any event, the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) was in the news late last week as having cleared the judge of the N10million bribery allegation pending against him. That clearance, from all indications, has made nugatory any plan by the Senate to proceed with its investigation of Justice Umar. A caveat though: EFCC is an interested party in the trial of the Senate President before Justice Umar, and I would personally have nursed serious reservations against the timing of its clearance of the tribunal judge, just like one did against the Senate summons on him. But the latest clearance was said to be reinforcing an earlier one issued under the administration of former President Goodluck Jonathan by the former leadership of the EFCC under Ibrahim Lamorde, and that minimizes the chances of sinister motivation regarding the Saraki case.

    Besides the sudden summoning of the tribunal judge, the Senate had earlier on set onto a fast track legislative process to amend the Code of Conduct Bureau and Code of Conduct Tribunal Acts, as well as the Administration of Criminal Justice (ACJ) Act. Notice that the Conduct Bureau is the Senate President’s accuser even though he is being prosecuted by the EFCC, while the Tribunal is the trial court; and a major plank of the proposed ACJ Act amendment was to exclude the Conduct Tribunal from the application of that Act, such that the tribunal would no longer have jurisdiction to try criminal matters as it is doing now in the case of the Senate President.

    The legislative chamber, of course, justified the proposed amendments and argued that persons accusing it of aiming to benefit the Senate President thereby were just ill-informed. The chairman of the Senate Committee on Media and Public Affairs, Aliyu Abdullahi, was reported as saying since the Saraki case commenced in 2015, any amendment of the law in 2016 could not retroactively affect an ongoing case.”The proposed amendment would still take a minimum of six months, given the long process that law-making requires. This process includes committee hearing, public hearing, reporting back to Senate Committee of the Whole, the concurrence in the House of Representatives, and assent by the President as the final stage. There is no way we will even complete the process of finally effecting the amendments before the completion of the Saraki case. So, those who read selfish or ulterior motives to this ordinary legislative activity are either mischievous or ignorant of legislative procedures,” he told journalists last week.

    All that may well be true. But again, the timing of the amendments was indiscretionary in the extreme, as some members of that legislative chamber had cared to counsel; and the haste that attended the first two readings of the amendment bills was spurious and uncharacteristic of the notoriously sticky legislative process. Really, what was the rush for? Even if the Senate truly had noble intentions with the proposed amendments, its timing and haste were irremediably suspect; and it was redeeming for the chamber to have decided last week to suspend further legislative action on the bills. The proposed amendments had looked like a legislative foundry to fashion spanners that could be thrown at the ongoing tribunal trial of the Senate president, and no alchemy of whitewash by the legislative chamber could have altered that perception.

    I am a firm believer in the presumed innocence of an accused person until proven guilty by a court of competent jurisdiction. But the Senate President must submit himself to trial and prove his innocence, if he is indeed innocent of the charges against him. So far, he has exerted judicial energy more on stalling the trial than in putting up a robust defence against the charges, and that does not add up to the profile of someone who really has a defence.

    Still, it is good that the 8th Senate is in search of redemption. While at it, the legislative chamber would need to get Nigerians to terms with its decision to procure a fleet of foreign-made exotic vehicles amidst severe drought of foreign exchange and dire economic difficulties facing this country. It had last week confirmed taking delivery of 36 units of Land Cruiser VXR V8 model, at N36.5million unit price, and not a few consider the procurement as insensitive and affronting to public sensibility. The chairman of the Committee on Senate Services, Senator Abdullahi Gobir, told journalists last week that the 36 units were all that would be acquired in view of the harsh economic conditions. “We bought 36 cars because each senator in each state is either a chairman or a vice-chairman and we gave one car to each state. We don’t have money to buy 108 cars, “he said.

    Well, the question arises as to how the number of states became a determinant factor for the Senate in acquiring those vehicles. If they were operational vehicles and not mere patronage items, how come the vehicles were not assigned on the basis of Senate committees or committee clusters, but rather on the basis of states? And if they were given in patronage, then the procurement of even one unit of the vehicle was a mindless rape on the national treasury. There is need for more explanation.

  • Eagles seek redemption

    Eagles seek redemption

    Nigeria and Cameroon will renew their rivalry when the two sides meet in an international friendly at the Stade Edmond Machtens in Brussels tomorrow.

    The Super Eagles will be looking to redeem themselves after being humbled by DR Congo on Thursday night losing 2-0 to the Leopards.

    It was a game characterised with a lot of lethargic play and a subdued performance that probably resonated from the squabbles in the team’s camp few days before the game.

    Former captain Vincent Enyeama had a fall out with Oliseh and subsequently left the Eagles camp. A few hours later, he announced his international retirement.

    The build up to the game had been chaotic from the start with players getting inured and Oliseh having to make do with a tiny squad as he opened camp due to the inability of some players to get entry visas to Belgium.

    Cameroun on the other hand have a relatively quite time in Belgium preparing for the game as Volker Finke prepares his wards for the 2018 World Cup preliminary rounds with another eye on the 2017 Afcon qualifiers next year.

    The Indomitable Lions defeated Belgian Jupiler Liga side KV Oostende 3-1 on Thursday night in a friendly game almost the same time Nigeria was pummelled by the DRC.

    Nigerian striker Joseph Akpala scored for Oostende as early as the second minute but Cameroun scored three times through Vincent Aboubakar, Aurelin Chedjou and Clinton Njie to win the game.

    Oliseh will have to get his charges ready to face a rampant Cameroun side who will be looking to do a number on Nigeria considering the much documented rivalry between the two sides.

    The last time Nigeria and Cameroun met, it was a 2-1 victory for the Super Eagles as a Jay Jay Okocha inspired Eagles led Nigeria to a quarter final win over the Lions at the Africa Cup of Nations in Tunisia in 2004.

    Nigeria will welcome the duo of Chima Akas and Austin Oboroakpo who weren’t involved in the first game because they got to Belgium late after being held up in Nigeria due to visa issues.

    Cameroun will sweat over the fitness of Olympique Marseille defender Nik Nkoulou after he picked up a knock.

    Key matchClinton Njie v Leon Balogun

    This will be a very interesting battle as Njie’s pace is one his biggest asset and it will be a very big test for Balogun who was average against DR Congo on Thursday night.

    Njie, who is with Tottenham Hotspur, was on target in Cameroun’s win against KV Oostende and will look for more against the Super Eagles.

    He plays from the left side of midfield for Cameroun which will pit him directly against Balogun on match day if they both get to play.

    Ahmed Musa v Aurelin Chedjou

    ‘Air Nigeria’ as Ahmed Musa is popularly called will test his wits against Cameroun centre back Chedjou on match day. The Nigeria skipper was a shadow of himself against DR Congo and would want to make amends against Cameroun.

    He is going to come up against a tough centre back who is good in the tackle and excellent aerially.

    Musa’s pace will definitely be an issue for the Galatasaray defender who isn’t exactly the quickest defender out there.

    Redemption time?

    Sunday Oliseh’s reign hasn’t exactly started off on a flyer. The former Borussia Dortmund player has played three games – winning one,losing one and drawing one.

    His reign has been tumultuous to say the least and recent incidents in the teams camp have done nothing to douse frayed nerves among Nigerians.

    Oliseh will seek redemption when his team files out against Cameroun on Sunday knowing a win will ease up the pressure from fans and boost team confidence .

    Yet, another insipid performance, like the one against DR Congo, might just pump up the pressure and get Oliseh nearer to the sin bin.