Tag: Solomon

  • Smoking a red flag, says Solomon Buchi

    Smoking a red flag, says Solomon Buchi

    Social media relationship expert Solomon Buchi has chaired a conversation on the internet about red flags in relationships, labelling smoking as one.

    Solomon Buchi, known for giving relationship and life advice, emphasised the importance of recognizing valid concerns in a relationship.

    In his latest message, he spoke on the importance of acknowledging certain behaviors as genuine red flags, rather than succumbing to emotional manipulation.

    Read Also: I just want to take care of Rema – American Singer Selena Gomez

    The main point of Buchi’s message centered on smoking. He stressed that it is crucial for individuals to trust their instincts and assess compatibility when it comes to such lifestyle choices.

    According to him: “Smoking is a valid relationship red flag. Don’t let anyone blackmail you”.

  • Solomon praises LASIEC for peaceful conduct of election

    The senator who represented Lagos West in the seventh National Assembly on the platform of All Progressives Congress (APC), Ganiyu Olarenwaju Solomon, has hailed the State Independent Electoral Commission (LASIEC) for conducting Saturday’s local government election peacefully.

    He praised the commission for promptly distributing election materials to polling units across the state.

    The senator spoke after casting his vote at Ward A in Mushin Local Government Area.

    He also hailed the electorate for maintaining peace during the election and the government for successfully conducting the election.

    Solomon urged the contestants and their parties to support and work with the winners.

    The senator also appealed to the newly elected chairmen and councillors to administer the state in accordance with APC’s constitution to enable the electorate enjoy dividends of democracy.

    He urged council leaders to support Governor Akinwunmi Ambode to make the mega city a better place to live in.

  • Solomon’s final take

    As usual on weekends like this, Solomon is engrossed in a collection of short stories. This time he is devouring The Reporter who dared the kingdom. It is the story of Uchechukwu Jumbo, who wrote a story declaring that a powerful king was dead. The king was really dead. But it was a taboo for anyone other than the palace to break the news. But Uche did and he murdered sleep.

    A day after the story was published in The Country, Uchechukwu got a phone call. The caller was cold. “He simply asked: Are you Jumbo?”  He got a positive response and added: “Check your mail. There is a letter there from the palace lawyer.”

    Before Uchechukwu could ask any question, he had cut the line. Uchechukwu was about asking him which palace. Pronto, he checked his mail and there was nothing from the palace. He felt this must be a huge joke. A friend probably playing a prank on him. He tried searching out the owner of the number on truecaller, but he drew blank. He thereafter sent a text message to the caller that there was no mail in his box.

    “I see. Wait for it,” was the reply from the man he chose to address as palace clown.

    “Alright your excellency,” he replied.

    True to the threat, Uchechukwu got a letter from the palace. He was asked to retract the story or risk a legal action.

    The Editor-in-Chief of The Country, Donald Ojugo, a no-nonsense man, was livid with rage when Uchechukwu showed him the mail from the palace. He was mad and insisted no such retraction would be carried.

    The ultimatum given them to carry the retraction expired and court summons were served on Uchechukwu, Donald and The Country.

    When the suit was heard, The Country was asked to prove that the king was indeed dead. It was asked to produce the dead certificate of the king. Uchechukwu was afraid. He did not expect the case would turn out that way. He was really terrified.

    But, the music changed and the dance step assumed a macabre mien when The Country decided to change its lawyer. Ladi Lawson’s takeover of the case changed the scenario and turned the tide against the palace.

    Since the case was Oba Topaiyae versus The Country and others, Lawson argued that the king must come to the court to show that he was truly alive and that The Country had lied against him. Osamudiamen Ugbomwan, who was the lead counsel for the palace, tried in vain to explain why the crown could not be

    brought to the court.

    The judge would hear none of that. As far as Justice Bileda Okunrinyiojale was concerned, if the king could sue, then he should come to the court.

    At this stage, Barrister Ugbomwan asked for adjournment for the king to be briefed about the latest development. Justice Okunrinyiojale granted the request and that was the last of that case. On the next hearing, the palace withdrew the case, saying it was no longer interested in pursuing it further.

    Uchechukwu was happy at the turn of event. Solomon laughs as he gets to the climax of the story, where modernity dealt a blow on the ancient.

    At that moment, a voice whispers to him: “The gods are dead. Why should we live in a modern world and carry on with the attitude of the Stone Age. The things of the old must belong nowhere else but in the old. This is the modern world, my brother. To hell with the days of yore.”

    He laughs and almost says: “My sentiment exactly!” Then his phone rings. It is Ikponwosa. What does he want this time around?

    He picks the call. Pleasantries over, Ikponwosa says: “It has started happening. My friend, who is a policeman in Ibinu, says the statistics of missing people have shot up in the last two months. And most of those who are missing are virgins. Girls who are preparing to start secondary education. Now, their families are in pains. Yet, they dare not shout out or voice their suspicion. They just die in silence. Ours is a world of fear and I am afraid this same fear will kill us one day, if we do not defeat it.”

    Solomon smiles as Ikponwosa vents his anger.

    “Just keep safe Ikponwosa. We will talk later.”

    It is siesta time for Solomon. He observes this as a ritual on weekends.

    ******************************

    The first thing that captures his attention is a signpost: ‘The land of silence, where the Oba of Ibinu goes after transition’. Before he makes sense out of that, he is confronted by another inscription: ‘The royal majesty comes here after leaving the savannah bush’.

    From nowhere, a strange man appears to him. His head is half clean shaven. He begins telling the tale of a kingdom so big that when its king dies, he is accompanied to the land of silence by three virgins who all their lives have been raised to live and die with the king.

    Another strange being soon joins them and picks up the story. He tells of a king so powerful, so revered, so great that he cannot just die alone. He has to be accompanied to the land of silence.

    The sun seems to have just come down. Yet there is so much breeze. And there is a bit of shower. It is all confusing. All strange. And then appears another man, a third man, less strange than the duo.

    “The world is a strange one,” he begins,”the more you look the less you see. No matter how you try, there are things you will never understand.  You can only try but understand you will not. The best way to go about life is to just stop trying to understand things that are not your business.”

    In that moment, the weather changes.  The sun disappears; the breeze stops; the shower ceases. Then from a far distant, a voice screams continuously: “The leopard is ill in the savannah bush. The leopard is ill in the savannah bush. The leopard is ill in the savannah bush.”

    ******************************

    And Solomon wakes up, sweating and panting. What kind of a dream is this? Then he says to himself:  “Let the leopard stay put in the bush for all I care. For me, there is no God like Jehovah our Lord. He is above any other being. He actually created all. He created heaven and earth. There was nothing in the beginning until He decreed things into existence. The world only had form and void when He said it should. Man and woman did not exist until he created them in His own image. Animals were nowhere until he decreed them into existence. This God, who is the only kabio-osi, is above all and I have this great God as my personal Lord and saviour, why on earth should I be afraid of an ordinary human-being that was created the same way my savior created me?”

    There and then, he decides to return to the Writers’ Haven to finish work on his novel. This time, he decides that no mortal will make him run home until the work is done and truly done.

    And to the haven’s serene bosom he returns.

  • Fashola, Solomon hail hospital promoters

    Fashola, Solomon hail hospital promoters

    Lagos State Governor, Babatunde Fashola has praised promoters of First Heritage Hospital (FHH), a private primary health care facility in Mushin.

    According to him, health facilities in the state are overburdened, hence people in Mushin and environs can now access healthcare at affordable price.

    Fashola, represented by his Special Assistant on Public Health, Dr Yewande Adeshina, said there was need for private investors to help government in providing such facilities.

    The hospital, he said, would handle patients and engage in disease prevention through health education and screening, adding: “This is necessary because our people do not go to the hospital until they are dying.”

    Senator Ganiyu Solomon thanked the hospital management for the initiative, which he described as a Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) by Reddington Hospital because some people could have built the facility elsewhere for financial gains.

    He said having the centre in the area is a good omen because lives will no longer be lost to preventable deaths.

    Reddington Hospital Chief Executive Officer, Dr Yemi Onabowale said the facility, which also has a diagnostic centre, is supported by his organisation.

    He said Reddington started from the same facility years ago, stressing that the hospital has been reconstructed to meet international standard.

    Onabowale said his organisation is collaborating with the hospital in technology transfer, training and referrals, among others.

    Treatment, he said, would be affordable and accessible, adding that people should take advantage of the facility.

     

     

  • Honour for Senators  Tinubu, Solomon, others

    Honour for Senators Tinubu, Solomon, others

    THE National Youth Council of Nigeria (NYCN), Apapa Iganmu Local Council Development Area (LCDA) chapter in Lagos State, has honoured Senator Oluremi Tinubu “for her selfless services to the state and the nation.”

    The group’s Chairman, Comrade Frank Nero, said she got the Excellence Award because “she is the best representative in the Lagos Central Senatorial District so far. She extended her goodwill to the grassroots by empowering the people, especially the youth”.

    Other personalities honoured by the group were: Oba Abdul Fatai Aremu Ojora; Hon Olumuyiwa Wahab Jimoh, member, Lagos State House of Assembly; Dr. C. Z. Anago, a former chairman, Apapa Iganmu LCDA; Senator Ganiyu Olarenwaju Solomon (GOS) of Lagos West; CID Onyeka, Divisional Police Officer (DPO), Orile, and Hon Bamidele Avoseh.

    Nero urged the youth to be law-abiding during the forthcoming election. “This is our nation; let nobody prepare for war. Elections are not for wars. The youth in the different parties should not see themselves as enemies; rather, they should see themselves as partners in progress. Elections are not about fighting,’’ he advised.

    The guest speaker, Comrade Nelson Ekunjemi, said the future of the country was in the hands of the youth, adding: “Some youths dissipate their energies in the wrong things like thuggery. I wonder why a youth would want to be used as an instrument of destruction. We should go for what we can do to develop ourselves. Some people, such as Jesus Christ and General Yakubu Gowon (rtd) became great men when they were youths. I wonder why a youth would want to be used as weapon of destruction.”

    Avoseh also advised the youth, saying: “If any politician buys you a cutlass or gun, tell him to give it to his brother.’’

    He urged traditional rulers to tell the politicians the truth, adding that when there is peace in the community, it is for the good of all.

  • Theme: God will remember you!

    Theme: God will remember you!

    Text: “ Now Naaman……. also a mighty man in valour, but he was a leper.”(2 Kings 5:1)

    In the wake of the recent appointment cum selection of ‘eminent, prominent and distinguished’ members of the society to the National conference to discuss the country and chart a better course for the nation, there have been hues and cries, even from some of the elected or selected members, about the eligibility of some of them using age, credibility, character, competence, chemistry and past misdeeds as basis of rejection of their candidature.

    It is also not news that position and promotion due to certain qualified individual are many times wrongly transferred. Suffice to say that, as part of the ironies of life, which Solomon said are traceable to the rulers’ evil and cascaded into princes walking on ground while servants are riding on horses (Eccl. 10:5-7), it is not every blessing and privilege which are the rights of people that are given to their rightful owners. While some rightful owners are either forgotten by people placed in privileged positions for recommendation or they are outrightly of the benefits due to them, others are ignored and some are avoided like a plague by powers that be.

    From our text, God asked if it was possible for a compassionate mother to deny her baby one of his inalienable rights of being breastfed. He went further to declare that it is possible for a person to be denied of what rightly belongs to him but added that He will never forget His children as He has graven them upon the palms of His hands and their walls are continually before Him (Is. 49:16).

    Joseph was a man who interpreted the dream of the Chief butler and just as he said, the man gained his freedom from prison and was restored to his position in the King’s palace. Before he was released, Joseph pleaded with him to show kindness to him and mention him to Pharaoh after he had been set free. When the Chief Butler was restored to his position from the prison however, he did not remember him- in fact, he forgot! (Genesis 40:14, 21-23).

    Two years later, God remembered him, He orchestrated a frightening dream that was devoid of clarity and needed only the spiritual expertise of Joseph to unravel. At that stage, the Chief butler remembered Joseph and he was promoted from the prison to the highest position in the land (Genesis 41:8-10,38-40). It was the same experience too when David remembered the household of Jonathan and decided to honor anyone left of that family, the story of the lame Mephibosheth changed. He was promoted from the pathway of a dead dog life to the highway of eating at the King’s table (2Samuel 9).

    That human beings have forgotten you is not the end of life because when God remembers you, man does not have a choice. In fact, when God remembers a person, He catapults the forgotten from a gate-keeper to being a Prime Minister, like Mordecai. He doesn’t stop it there, He ensures that the accuser becomes the accused like Haman. When the book of remembrance is opened to you, God will facilitate a miracle of “more than enough”. When He remembered Hannah, the problem of long years of barrenness was solved immediately and she became the mother of children (1 Samuel 1:19-20,2:21)

    During this season of lent, God who remembered Hannah at Shiloh will remember you, all your privileges and blessings shall be restored to you, yoke of barrenness shall be destroyed, garments of reproach shall be destroyed, your accusers shall turn to the accused and you shall be promoted beyond your imagination in Jesus’ name.

    Prayers: Father, remember me during this season of lent and put an end to my shame, lack, fear, regrets and disgrace in Jesus’ name.

     

  • Why we dropped Solomon — Eaglets coach

    Why we dropped Solomon — Eaglets coach

    A coach of the Nigeria Under-17 team has finally opened up on the controversial exclusion of HNK Rijeka youngster Theophilus Solomon from the Nigeria Under-17 Team.

    Speaking on the condition of anonymity, he said: “It was one of the toughest decisions we had to make during the camping in Calabar as Theophilus Solomon was on fire but everybody knows that the essence of our camping in Calabar was to discover midfielders and defenders as we are well covered in the attack, that aside we would have gone with him but the directive of 30 players by the NFF further tied our hands.

    “Solomon on his part wasn’t the same after his muscle problem even though he scored a brace in our last game before he was asked to go.”

    On allegations that he had problems with some coaching staff, the coach said:“Yes I know of a particular coach who accused him of not greeting him prior to a training session but that wasn’t an issue at all, he is a cool kid, level headed and also some people claimed he was outshining Isaac Success that isn’t true as well.

    “Success is Success, Solomon is Solomon, we reached a joint conclusion that our four attackers who have been with us for over three years should be considered first and that was it.”

    Concluding he said: “He is a good player, a very good one. I read he has agreed to join Catania, he will be a big hit, I even tip him to break into the Super Eagles squad ahead of some players who will play at the Under-17 World Cup.”

  • King Solomon’s (pension) mine

    King Solomon’s (pension) mine

    During a recent visit to the national headquarters of the Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission (ICPC) in Abuja, the Chairman, Pension Reform Task Team, Abdulrasheed Maina, told his hosts that N300 million daily was stolen from the Police Pension Office “through fictitious cheques prepared in the names of fake pensioners.” So far, he continued, investigators had been able to uncover pension fraud totalling some N36 billion. In addition, and more worrisomely, he also added, investigators had only covered about 40 percent of the pension scam. As if this gargantuan scam was not enough nightmare for everyone, the Pension Reform Team also told the ICPC that far more frightening scam had been uncovered in the Local Government Pension Funds where some N3.3 trillion had been deducted without proper accountability between 1976 and today.

    The scale of the mismanagement of pension funds is unimaginable. What should the country expect when investigations are completed? And in spite of the exposure of the seedy details of pension scam, is anybody discouraged from following the same criminal path? Indeed, going by past scams of this magnitude, is anyone behind bars?

    It can hardly get juicier or racier than these, except perhaps you are a fan of Victorian adventure novels such as King Solomon’s Mines (1885), in which, complete with maps and other tools, you embark on a journey in search of hidden treasures. It is in fact doubtful whether the author of King Solomon’s Mines, Sir Rider Haggard, would not have been overwhelmed with inspiration had he lived in modern Nigeria. Here in Nigeria, no one needs maps or any other tools to locate where the treasures are, and they are not even hidden. After completing tentative investigations into the fuel subsidy scam, the National Assembly discovered that many oil merchants had broken the law. Most of the suspects already charged in court are said to have fraudulently converted billions of naira of subsidy funds. One is even being investigated for fraudulently converting over N40 billion subsidy funds, a sum estimated to be approximately the monthly allocations of 11 states.

    Pension funds and fuel subsidy payments may be the most lucrative avenues for corrupt enrichment modern Nigeria has known; in reality, however, this most dystopian of countries has become a huge mine, far more lucrative than any other known route to wealth. As the poor opt for armed robbery, kidnapping and Internet scams, the elite will apparently continue to concentrate on pension and subsidy scams. Pension and subsidy scams may not seem like real mines where gold, silver and platinum are extracted; but they are nonetheless mines yielding inexhaustible treasures any Victorian novelist would have loved to be inspired by. Perhaps Robert Louis Stevenson (Treasure Island) and Sir Rider Haggard lived before their times.