Tag: success story

  • Success story of a digital entrepreneur

    Digital currencies using online distributed ledger-block chain hold the promise as a secure, improved and transparent method to speed up transactions, cut costs and eliminate fraud. This instrument has created a huge opportunity for entrepreneurs to find new ways to leverage block chain technology in order to create better systems and services. One of them is Co-founder, Kubitx, a pan-African financial technology start-up, Eric Annan Kubitx. The startup has established an exchange to help Nigerians transfer money without border restrictions, DANIEL ESSIET reports.

    The search is on for a digital system that holds the promise as a secure, improved and transparent method to speed up transactions, cut costs and eliminate fraud. Enthusiasts include the founder and ex-CEO of Microsoft, Bill Gates, founder of  Virgin Group, Sir Richard Branson, United States ex-Vice -President Al Gore and former Chief  Executive, Google, Eric Schmidt. Globally, the financial sector has seen an escalating stream of fascinating new technology uses, cases and applications.

    This has created a huge opportunity for entrepreneurs to find new ways to leverage block chain technology in order to create better systems and services for organisations and individuals. One of them is the co-founder, Kubitx, a Pan-African financial technology startup, Eric Annan.

     

    What is block chain technology?

    A blockchain is a digital, public ledger that records online transactions.

    Trained as an investment banker, Annan pioneered the establishment of two microfinance banks in Ghana. In the last three years, he has been  involved in a series of block chain activities and training. He has established an exchange to help Nigerians transfer money without border restrictions, using digital currencies.  His vision is to merge the traditional investments with the power of the block chain, to allow  clients to trade between conventional financial instruments and digital assets, using a single platform, and in a legal and fully transparent fashion. One of his concerns was that money remittance was greatly hindered by the banks and currency control regulations of different countries.  He   was challenged by the overwhelming difficulties Nigerians and other Africans experienced trying to transfer and receive money from place to place.

    While it took time for banks to transmit money from one country to another, the administration fees charged by banks were unreasonably high.

    With years of experience in the financial sector, he turned to digital currency. He discovered it while researching online for opportunities to generate new income.

    He believed the invention of block chain will help him make a breakthrough to it.  Within the industry, safety and security are crucial. He claimed that block chain technology holds true value in financial transactions. According to him, blockchain presents a solution to the current lack of transparency. It allows for true decentralisation as pricing is moved to this high-tech virtual ledger.

    A defining feature of block chain is that it cryptographically encodes data via an algorithm-based process called hashing. Once data is recorded in a block, a unique hash number corresponding to it is generated. The next block is then linked to the previous block by using the latter’s hash number to generate the former’s hash number – this means that if a block is tampered with, it is detected since the hash number that is linked to the subsequent blocks will be lost. Additionally, block chain incorporates other unique security features that make recording data – and transactions, in general – much safer and harder to manipulate.

    For him, fintech is a new promising industry that is going to change the Nigerian financial sphere.

    Founded in 2016, Annan said Kubitx is a “hybrid digital asset exchange” that leverages distributed ledger technology to facilitate payments throughout Africa and abroad. It also offers trade financing, while handling remittances and over-the-counter trades. In addition, the exchange is registered as a legal entity in Nigeria and Zimbabwe.

    Through its simple and user-friendly interface, users can experience trading with no boundary and time limitation.

    The startup taking advantage of the digital currency ecosystem has grown rapidly in African countries such as Kenya, Ghana, Uganda, Nigeria, South Africa and Zimbabwe over the past few years. The exchange hopes to open new trading platforms across the continent.

    Like every start-up, the business encountered a lot of difficulties and had to go through  a lot of challenges.

    At a time, he and other co-founders felt heartbroken but they were not deterred. He saw a long time vision.

    To survive, he reworked his vision, revenue model and make changes constantly. The digital exchange, he added, aims to become a vehicle of choice for individuals and retail investors around the globe, integrating conventional and crypto markets.

    He is a determined entrepreneur, positive about the new possibilities that digital currency and technology can bring to the life of many more Nigerians in the near future.

    According to him, Kubitx is just not another crypto exchange, but it’s a creation born out of real passion to serve. He is very positive and optimistic about industry. According to him, there are still a lot of opportunities in digital currencies and the underlying block chain technology. He believes that non-cash payment would be in the mainstream in not so long future.

    Kubitx recently reached an agreement with Interswitch International, a major payment switching company for most Nigerian banks, with an additional presence in Kenya and Uganda. It will operate its fiat-to-crypto payments and remittance business in those markets, the exchange said. It has struck similar deals with Modulus Global, NEM Foundation and in Zimbabwe with undisclosed local financial institutions.

    He is working with developers to try to get them involved in using block chain to bring solutions to the problems that are faced by Africans in everyday life.

    His advice to young entrepreneurs: “What every entrepreneur needs to do is to be selfless and take away the “I and Me”, and begin to think like “Us, We” in all the projects they wish to come up with. All big internet companies such as Apple, Google, Amazon, Alibaba, Facebook, etc., were all built with synergies not on individual strength. To have a legacy enterprise in Africa that can go beyond two to 10 generations like we have in other parts of the world, we need to think as business people, not being emotional, sentimental, but adhere to strict rules that applies to successful ones.”

  • Success story of an inspiring young entrepreneur

    A banking and finance graduate of Olabisi Onabanjo University, Ago-Iwoye, Ogun State, Omolola Olowu, has found success sourcing and selling cheaper electronics accessories, DANIEL ESSIET reports.

    A YOUNG entrepreneur, Omolola Olowu, has always had an interest in technology and phones based on her belief that they are the most impactful on humanity. According to her, almost everybody use them, and phones make up the single biggest market today.

    Olowu’s dream was to set up a business, selling phone accessories. She started in 2011 as an undergraduate in school.

    She recalled: “It started back in school during the BlackBerry trend, I’m a phone freak and most students are as well. So, I helped a lot of them then with buying a United Kingdom (UK)-used phone and helping them sell their current phone to upgrade to trendy ones. This made me some cash. Then I decided to use that cash to start a business I can maintain with little capital. so, I decided to start an accessories business. I realised we had a challenge with electricity in school and smartphones had short battery life, then I thought what good is a smartphone if the battery can’t get you through the day? This made me look at how to solve the low battery issue. I started the power bank business, which is what I major in till date.”

    She said to make her business trendier she added other accessories, such as hands free, pouch, flash drive, chargers, memory card, mouse and everything that is accessory related.

    On smartphone, she said it represents the centre of peoples’ digital lives and will be so for long. She noted:“I love the tech industry mainly because of my passion for phones and gadget in general. I bet I can change my phones thrice a year to explore and that’s what made me turn this passion to business. The insights gained during the period helped me into the booming world of consumer tech.”

    But she started with nothing: “Then all I did was connecting sellers and buyers  and it was amazingly  possible without having a penny. All I needed was to get a value chain, finding someone who needed a particular product and connecting them to a seller with a commission given to me.”

    On her experience, she said while on campus, she was selling handsets and  garnered knowledge about them. Little sales earned her some money to meet some of her needs because she was adamant about meeting her needs from her own pocket. She dug deeper into the business while researching the market.

    She said after the initial struggle, she made some money, lived well and employed two workers, adding that she quit her salary paying job last year and registered her business as Lollyp Accessories with the Corporate Affairs Commission (CAC).

    On her most satisfying moment in business,  she said: “My most satisfying moment was when I posted my business on social media and I pleaded with my colleagues to share my post on their page. They did and from one of the shared post I got an order of N200,000 and the buyer paid before delivery, I delivered the next day and till date that moment inspires me. That was my biggest sale then and it came the very month I quit my paid job, it was like a dream. However, social media is my shop and everyday I open my apps there’s an order waiting for me, this gives me joy.”

    On lessons learnt so far: “My failure is keeping up with delivery and I have learnt to always communicate with my buyers ahead if there will be a change in time. Logistics companies can really be a pain, I started with doing deliveries myself, but as we grow I partnered delivery companies, but many of them don’t keep to time which in turn affects the business and poses as a failure on our part.“

  • US based actor Ofu Obekpa shares his success story

    U.S.-based Nigerian filmmaker Ofu Obekpa, who came into the country for the promotion of his action movie, Klippers, has revealed that he had earlier tried to run away from acting.

    Speaking at the premiere of the movie at Ozone Cinema, Yaba, Lagos on Thursday, Obekpa who hails from Benue State and has starred in movies like ‘Captain America: Civil war’, and ‘Black Panther’ said acting runs in his family.

    “I’ve been acting for a long time. My mum used to be an actress. My sister studies theatre. I think it’s a family thing. I literarily ran away from it. But it’s like I’m coming to full circle right now. Life is funny as it is. I never thought I was going to be an actor but here I am now. I went to film school, taking advice from my dad, to add more production value to myself and learn the whole craft of movie making. So, that’s how I know how to edit, write, direct and all that good stuff.”

    ‘Klippers’ is about an assassin sent by his employer to kill his ex-wife. In his quest to accomplish the task, the assassin develops a fondness for his target. His employer then sends another hit man who has a scary success record of getting the job done. A series of events triggers a face off and the race to stay alive begins. In the movie, Ofu stars alongside WWE legend Kevin Nash, formerly known as Diesel,

    Nigerian international seasoned actor, Conphidance, and Robert Pralgo.

    Speaking about the feedbacks he has been getting, Obekpa said it’s been love. “All these people telling me congrats, I’m really happy,” said Obekpa

    who has worked on several American movies, television productions and has shot some documentaries.

    “It’s great. I enjoyed it. Hard work pays.”

    The actor also said he hopes the Nigerian audience would accept his movie. After its Nigerian run, ‘Klippers’ which is powered by Skyrunner Productions will also be watched in Czech Republic, Japan, France, Russia, Poland, Brazil and Spain.

  • Omi Dam, success story of our agric policies, says Kogi

    The Kogi State Government has said the success of the Omi Dam Agricultural Project is clear testimony of the genuineness of government determination to shift the state economy from civil service reliance to  agricultural prosperity.

    Speaking in Kabba, at the weekend, the Director General of Media and Publicity to the Governor, Kingsley Fanwo, said the state government has “blazed the trail by providing jobs for more youths through the project”, urging investors to “tap into the potentials of the project to establish processing zones in the area”.

    “Today, the Omi Dam Agricultural Project has provided more jobs than the combined number of all the Civil Servants from the seven Local Government Areas of Kogi West. This is the focus of  Governor Yahaya Bello to redirect the state’s economy from white-collar base to that of a green revolution by becoming the number one food destination of Africa.

    “The present administration is working closely with the New Direction Blueprint which seeks to create jobs and human capacity development for wealth creation.

    “Kogi is naturally endowed to excel in agriculture. We have taken a step further by transforming our potentials into reality through the massive agricultural projects in Omi, Osara, Ibaji and Idah. The aim of government is to refocus the economy and empower our youth and women to see agriculture as an easy way of combating hunger and poverty as well as making the state a big player in the global agricultural market.

    “When completed, the ongoing Greenhouse Project at Osara will turn Kogi to an Agric hub and concentrate our population on adding to our revenue rather than depending on salaries”.

    Fanwo said the administration is concentrating on delivering democracy dividends to the people rather than joining issues with detractors who are bent on discrediting the administration for political reasons.

    “As the poster of the youth in Nigerian politics, Governor Yahaya Bello has taken daring steps that are capable of fixing a badly damaged state. Such reforms provoke reactions expectedly. But he will remain committed to the wellness and progress of the state.

    “A good number of capital projects have been initiated, completed and inaugurated without much fanfare. Some projects are also in progress. The administration has completed over 300km of road construction across the state.

    “All the road projects are ongoing simultaneously across the three Senatorial Districts . We also make bold to say we have provided more water to our people more than any administration since the creation of Kogi State.

    “The people of Kogi State appreciate what the Governor is doing and will not be swayed by the elitist war of some people who are pained by the fact that there is no more “free money” in the state. That is why they sponsor falsehood against the administration.

    On allegations of failure to pay salaries to civil servants, the Governor’s spokesperson said it is a “media creation, sponsored and sustained by the elites to create an image issue for the state”.

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

  • An undergraduate’s success story

    An undergraduate’s success story

    King Adeyemi Adedamola, a Caleb University student, has turned his hubby, photography, into a profitable venture. He tells Timilehin Babatope his story.

    King Adeyemi Adedamola, a Caleb University undergrade, is a professional photographer, who services schools, groups and corporate organisations. He started his business of photography after  gaining admission into the university. “I think the reason is that I love art, creativity and fashion.  I am obsessed with fashion, so that got me in love with photography,”he said.

    On how he began the business.  He said: “I started with my friend  and course mate, Henry Okpara .We met at Caleb University. I don’t have any apprentice yet, but I have people who come and gain knowledge from me about photography.”

    After settling down in school, he   took advantage of the various workshops and programmes the university and groups offered. The programmes provided him with very good networking opportuni-ties. One of them was photo-graphy, which he practised to create eye-catching displays, working around the school’s timetables.

    Although he has grown a huge clientele and the bulk of his business is around the school, he has become more and more involved in live event photography. The prices he charges have not shown him as being cheap or expensive; rather, he has managed to treat each client according to his or her financial capability, especially those he has created an enduring business relationship with. “If I am doing a studio shoot, I charge N10,000 to N15,000. But for outdoor jobs, I take about N7,000 for five pictures. But I treat my regular customers well,”he said.

    Speaking on the challenges he has faced since he started, he said:: “Photography is expensive. The  equipment we use are expensive.  Even editing apps are not free. We  pay for them.”

    Another challenge, according to him, is the people who do not value quality pictures. To him, they prefer wait- and- get photographers, who charge less and ultimately destroy business for him..

    Nevertheless, Adedamola has really enjoyed his time at the university, making money and growing his business. He spoke about all the opportunities and facilities that the university has for students’ businesses, noting that the key things that have aided his business are the environment, friends and the opportunities at his disposal.

    To excel as an undergraduate doing business on campus, Adeda-mola said one needs to be determined and motivated.

    To him, coming to Caleb University has really motivated him  to grow his business. He has learnt so much,.  But it is not this success that is the inspirational part of this story; it’s his attitude  and his definition of success. To him, success means putting a smile on someone’s face.

    He has ambitious plans but is currently focusing on expanding his services to his school mates on the campus and the larger society.

    He said: “I see myself photographing top models all around the world. I am also a portrait/fashion photographer.”

  • Lagos is my success story and I am a journalist (2)

    It is not ‘just a billboard’ if it suggests subliminal bias to impressionable minors. It is not ‘a harmless campaign’ if it corrupts the thinking of the youth. Thus every element of the ‘Lagos is my success story’ media campaign manifests as a ritual of provocation; a rite of mediocrity, scorched by prejudice and shackled to ignorance.

    The grandeur of the campaign subsists in its classification of role models; Lagos names its finest and celebrates them. But role models, like mentors, should be exemplars of excellence, ethics and unimpeachable character.

    Thus of hip hop crooner, Olamide Adedeji a.k.a Baado and Sunday Punch Editor, Toyosi Ogunseye, who would Governor Ambode request to mentor his teenage child? Of Fuji maestro, Wasiu Alabi a.k.a Pasuma Wonder and Prof. Sophie Oluwole, the UNILAG academic working with various African countries to have indigenous African knowledge systems included in schools’ curriculum, who would Ambode suggest as mentor to his daughter?

    Of hip hop singer, Banky W and Ajanaku Babatunde, a staff of Ojota Senior Secondary School, who won the Best Teacher Award in the Lagos Secondary Schools Category recently, who would Ambode suggest as mentor to his son?

    As Lagos celebrates its 50th anniversary, it excludes teachers and journalists from its narrative out of spite – latent spite perhaps. The spiteful dialectic of the incumbent State government is sweepingly comprehensive and accurately projects the fallacies and notions of the ruling class about the worth and contributions of educators and journalists to the statehood.

    Beneath this curious malice, an uglier message resonates: “Journalists and teachers are worthless in Lagos.” Thus Governor Akinwumi Ambode and his team once again, amplify his predecessor’s barbed love and veiled loathing for teachers and journalists.

    True, Lagos announces the best teacher in the State and awards a prize to the recipient often in a drab ceremony. But the latter’s exploits are deliberately underplayed and hidden in plain sight.

    While Lagos celebrates marketers of filth, sex scandals, violence and corruption – alongside very few remarkable citizens – as the State’s pride, at its 50th anniversary, the State deliberately ignores the achievements of the moral, devoted, sterling men and women by whose exploits and contributions the likes of Governor Ambode and his team became the ‘titans’ they claim to be today.

    Teachers moulded Ambode and his team into the men and women they have become today. And I am sure the incumbent government remembers how it used journalists to achieve its dream of emerging as Lagos’ new ruling class – a sad reality this writer continually objects to.

    Yet Lagos violently silences the excellent achievements of exceptional teachers in the State, the same way it stifles the attainments and value of journalists to Lagos. This is the juncture at which the governor’s lackeys would scoff and exhume ‘revelations’ and ‘realities’ of the media’s dirty secrets. Thus it won’t be surprising to hear them prattle about the level of corruption and incompetence of journalists and the Nigerian media. It’s sadder to note that their argument could be true, in most part.

    This doesn’t mean that all journalists are corrupt. Not every journalist can be tarred with the brush of incompetence and corruption. Perhaps the Lagos government has suffered unsavourable experiences by journalists thus its undisguised disdain for them.

    But shall we as journalists cum citizenry of the State also condemn the Lagos government as a coven of brutes and looters of public fund simply because of tragic experiences with previous governments?

    Would it be appropriate to label Governor Ambode as irredeemably corrupt, incompetent and vicious, simply because most incumbent and past public officers have been established so? Would it be logical to infer that his ongoing development drive is a ruse, a coordinated scheme to con the electorate and earn their mandate for a second term simply because most governors are known to do that? Would it be alright to tar the ‘indefatigable governor’ with the brush of the pseudo progressive and performer simply because his predecessor and peers have established themselves so? If it would be wrong to imagine such of Governor Ambode, it is likewise unforgivable to consider all journalists corrupt and ‘lap dogs’ of the ruling class, simply because of a few or many ‘bad eggs.’

    I do not care what manner of relationship the State nurtures and sustains with its ‘friendly journalists’ and ‘media managers’ in the State; I speak for the youth. I speak for the diligent men and women pulling all stops to foster development by engaging the citizenry and ruling class via progressive, honest, public service journalism.

    It is unclear what manner of due process birthed the ‘Lagos is my success story’ media contract/jamboree but the manner of execution of the campaign, from the trashy bill boards used to its horrid subliminal messages, establish the mediocrity, shallowness and prejudice of the team in charge.

    Lagos emphatically markets hip hop artistes to the youth as role models, irrespective of their true nature. Olamide for instance, is a very talented and brilliant artiste – no doubt – but he continually preens about people wanting to kill him in almost every music track. He celebrates promiscuity, consequence-free violence and sex in lewd lyrics and expressive beats. And you could really dance to it.

    Toyosi on the other hand, is an investigative journalist whose work has enriched the human condition in Lagos teaching hospitals, industrial complexes, socioeconomic and security sectors. It is only in Lagos government’s middling and misshapen universe that a character like Olamide would command greater recognition and respect than Sunday Punch Editor, Toyosi Ogunseye, and The Cable’s former Editor, Fisayo Soyombo, among others.

    Sunday Punch’s Toyosi has won the CNN/Multichoice African Journalist of the Year Award, back to back, among several local and international media excellence awards. Her stories, like celebrated investigative journalists, Emmanuel Maya’s and Fisayo Soyombo’s depict and shed light on the corruption of the human condition and likely solutions to societal maladies.

    These are men and women of uncommon valour and devotion to the pursuit of public good and they are celebrated world over for their exploits.  Lest we forget the very few but rare breed of honourable senior editors, journalists and multiple merit award-winners at Nigeria’s major newspapers.

    These journalists and their ilk expose the shamelessness, incompetence and greed of public officers and so-called ‘corporate titans.’ They are serial award winners for public service journalism that any nation would be proud of. But the Lagos government scorns their achievements.

    Perhaps if Toyosi, Soyombo and colleagues were children of a governor, corporate titan or friend of the incumbent government, they would be celebrated as great role models and ambassadors of Lagos.

    Welcome to Lagos, the State that gleefully hosted Kim Kardashian in celebration of perverse celebrity in curious circumstances. This is Lagos, where foreign footballers, artistes and politicians with expiry dates are canonised while the timeless contributions, citizenship and excellence of journalists and teachers are ignored, simply because they have got no ‘swagger.’

    Yeah, Lagos values ‘swagger’ over merit. It celebrates brilliance only when it is garnished with the base and corrupt, atrocious ego and strut.

    However, some of  the persons celebrated in  the ‘Lagos at 50’ media campaign are indeed deserving of recognition. They are men and women of merit and remarkable citizenship. You  could identify them as your politics and personal ethics dictate.

    Ambode’s ‘Lagos is my success story’ for all its glamour and ingenuity, symbolises the cultural shift of Lagos from disciplined enterprise, humaneness and morality to unbridled hedonism. It markets celebrity to the youth as the zenith of ambition and human endeavour. It is the stuff dreams are maimed by.

     

  • Lagos is my success story and I am a journalist (1)

    Lagos despises journalists and teachers, it would seem. The Lagos government has no regard for the educator and pressman. In the estimation of the incumbent government for instance, journalists and teachers belong to the invisible divide, the negligible integers loitering at the foot of the totem pole, in the State’s warped categorisation of ‘eminent’ citizenry.

    This among other reasons, explains the incumbent government’s brazen disregard for teachers and journalists, in its showy ‘Lagos is my success story,’ media blitz.

    Of course, the media team in charge of the project will rant and rave. They will claim that it is impossible to represent every interest in the ongoing media campaign launched by the State in commemoration of Lagos’ 50th anniversary. They will dismiss this as yet another outburst from a journalist with ‘hidden agenda’ against Mr. Ambode. That’s understandable, they need to justify the salaries they earn – whether they deserve it or not.

    However, this writer has no agenda against Ambode. In fact, the incumbent governor attracts applause as he unfurls as a humane and decisive administrator – if only he would sustain the pace at which he seeks to improve infrastructure, security and the economic growth of the state.

    Beneath trifling considerations about the media campaign for the State’s 50th anniversary, ugly truths resonate in shrill notes. Funke Akindele, actress; Fuji artiste, Wasiu Alabi (Pasuma Wonder), hip hop artistes, Bankole Wellington (Banky W) Tuface Idibia and Olamide are celebrated as worthy role models and ambassadors of Lagos State.

    That these characters are celebrated alongside elderly folk of various callings, indicate that the State government nurtures a robust fascination with the youth and a hankering to connect positively with the youth divide. This is impressive even in the face of the underlying ugliness that informed the State government’s choice of subjects for the campaign.

    Akindele, Alabi Pasuma, Banky W, Tuface Idibia and Olamide are artistes and celebrities; like Folorunsho Alakija, Michael Otedola and other elderly subjects used for the campaign, they are widely adjudged to be rich, famous, poster icons for several youths.

    Governor Ambode and his team perpetuate the emphatic message to impressionable youth: “Only celebrity artistes, billionaire businessmen and politicians are recognised as role models by Lagos State. They are the only ones worth celebrating by Lagos.”

    Lest we forget the random pictures of the artisan and market woman used without emphasis in the campaign; the latter will undoubtedly be referenced by apologists of the shoddy and quite shady campaign.

    The use of the random artisan and trader alongside Lagos government’s preferred ambassadors is instructive. The artisan and market woman represent the highly populated divide of have-nots and residents of Lagos suburbs and backwaters. They are of the segment that the State government and politicians perpetually exploit to get votes and win elections via an insidious culture of tokenism and sound bite politics.

    The artistes including Olamide, Banky W, Funke Akindele and Tuface Idibia are of the disposable ‘muscle’ divide; they represent the agents often deployed by the State government and political class to achieve influence with the electorate. The Lagos government, like governments world over, persistently make use of celebrity artistes to influence the electorate and sway votes to advantage. They understand that these artistes enjoy large following among the citizenry hence they persistently tap into and cash in on the power of their celebrity.

    Whether the subjects used in the campaign are worthy role models and true ambassadors of the soul and essence of Lagos is yet another subject fit for future discourse. This brings us to Governor Ambode and his team’s exclusion of journalists and teachers from the campaign. I choose to highlight the State’s exclusion of educators and pressmen from the campaign given the crucial roles they play in the development of the State.

    Journalists and teachers represent the State’s middle class. Their contributions to nationhood are immense: teachers are nurturer of society and journalists are its conscience and custodians of morality. But like policemen and soldiers, among others, they are persistently undervalued and vilified. This explains why retired teachers are never treated well by the State.

    Even in Lagos, retiree teachers are denied their gratuity and many of them still die wretchedly, of hunger and lack. At their death, their family members are made to jump through hoops in order to receive the retirement benefits the deceased were denied in their lifetime.

    We have great teachers; I categorically refer to primary and secondary school teachers in Lagos yet none of them was deemed worthy of celebration as Lagos clocks 50. I hope Ambode’s aides won’t start making noise about how they celebrate the best teachers across the state’s district. This piece condemns the incumbent government’s neglect of the teachers as it celebrates Lagos’ most prized ambassadors, as the State clocks 50.

    That journalists are also neglected however, comes as no surprise. This is the juncture Ambode’s men would scream: ‘Soni Irabor is a journalist. He was included!’ Good for Mr. Irabor. It’s worth celebrating that he was included. But we also have journalists that have won over 10 to 25 local and international awards for media excellence, for stories written about developmental issues affecting Lagos and various parts of the country and even Africa.

    They include Emmanuel Maya, Toyosi Ogunseye, Adekunle Yusuf, Ajibola Hamza, Muyiwa Lucas, Fisayo Soyombo, to mention a few. These journalists are in their youth, like the artistes featured by Ambode’s team but they are deliberately ignored. They are not worth celebrating, according to Governor Ambode and his team.

    Nonetheless, the story of Lagos will never be complete without acknowledging the contributions of past and present journalists and teachers. These esteemed segments of the citizenry are however, overlooked and their relevance severely underplayed by the incumbent government, like its predecessors. This is why no teacher and journalist are represented in the State’s 50th anniversary media campaign.

    This loathing for educators and pressmen can hardly be understood even as it continues to unravel. Thanks to teachers, education reflects in Gov. Ambode. Great thanks to Edumare and his teachers, he is gradually becoming a source of pride to Lagos and Nigeria perhaps. Part of the glory should definitely be given to his parents and the governor himself as it requires a great deal of discipline and adherence to norms for a man to evolve like Ambode.

    Once again, it’s worth celebrating that Lagos now has a governor who believes in fostering development at the grassroots. Ambode determinedly institutes development in areas erstwhile neglected by his predecessor, Babatunde Fashola. This no doubt indicates that somewhere within Ambode’s bulk subsists appreciable and inspiring humaneness, foresight and lust for excellence.

    The governor will do well to ensure that retirees and pensioners in the State receive their benefits in the first six months into their retirement. Retired teachers do not get paid in time. They have to wait for several years before they receive their benefits from the state. Many have died without receiving their benefits.

  • Van Gaal Names Finidi George in his Ajax success story

    Van Gaal Names Finidi George in his Ajax success story

    Years after Nigerian international Finidi George quit active football, his former manager and current Manchester United sweat merchant has recalled with nostalgia how he personally paid the transfer fee to get Finidi on board.

    The Dutchman who won three Eredivisie titles and the Champions League during his six years as Ajax  manager in what could pass for stock taking expressed delight that the players he had then rose to the occasion and produced impressive results even as he revealed financial constraints that forced him to rely on the club’s academy.  Van Gaal who took over Man United last year following the sacking of David Moyes revealed that he paid Finidi George’s transfer fee of £3,000, adding however that the former Eagles winger was not the only one he got on board as the likes of Edgar Davids, Patrick Kluivert, Clarence Seedorf and Edwin van der Sar all joined him to make the team tick.

    Speaking at the at the LMA annual conference, Van Gaal reflected on his time at Ajax and how he was forced to rely on the club’s academy for success.

    “We didn’t have any money and we were bankrupt, so I had to look to youth,” the Manchester United boss told The Daily Telegraph.

    “We scouted [Jari] Litmanen, a Finnish player, who we bought for £10,000. We also bought Finidi George. He was a Nigerian international. He was £3,000. I paid it by myself! And then, we bought Marc Overmars.

    “But the names that you do remember are Seedorf, Kluivert, [Michael] Reiziger. We won everything with very attacking football. I don’t say it too much because otherwise Mr Scholes will be very angry,” he enthused Wednesday

     

  • Governor’s wife to women: be part of new success story

    THE wife of the Osun State Governor, Alhaja Sherifat Aregbesola, has enjoined women to unite and key into the transformation agenda of the state’s current administration in order to be part of its success story.

    Mrs. Aregbesola spoke in Osogbo, the Osun State capital, at a rally tagged: “Women in Politics” organised by her office and Ministry of Women and Children Affairs.

    She said the “moving train of development is going through the state” and they cannot afford to be indifferent.

    The event, which was held at Nelson Mandela Freedom Park, Osogbo, was attended by political office-holders, party chieftains, lawmakers, civil society groups, market women among others.

    Mrs. Aregbesola noted that the only way to ensure that the ongoing transformation continued unabated is to ensure that Governor Rauf Aregbesola emerged victorious in the forthcoming governorship election.

    She enjoined them to always champion crusade for peace by warning their children to shun act of thuggery and violence in the coming election.

    Expressing her appreciation over women’s support for her husband over the years, appealed to them to do more by voting for him in the next August election, so that jointly, they can take the state to the land of promise where equal opportunities and abundant welfare abound.

    Governor Aregbesola, who also spoke at the event, expressed optimism in women, stressing that his administration has been recognising their role since inception.

    He added that his harmonious relation with women has given him courage, confident and tenacity to forge ahead against all odds.

  • Lesson from Singapore’s success story

    In 1976, as president of the Nigerian chapter of the World University Service (WUS), I had to go and attend a seminar in Hong Kong, and the international convention of WUS in Manila, Philippines. I discovered that, with a little addition to my flight ticket, I could visit a few more countries in Southeast Asia. Many small countries in that region weremaking great progress in economic development. These countries were similar to our country, Nigeria, and to the other countries of Africa, in many respects. Like our African countries, they were former European colonies. But they were doing very well indeed, becoming technologically developed and growing rich, while our own countries in Africa were all engulfed in political turmoil and becoming poorer and poorer. I decided to see the Asian economic miracles.

    As I tried to learn about the countries that I should visit, I found that I must, at all costs, include Singapore. Singapore had an almost unbelievable story.  Singapore had been a federating member of the Malaysian Federation until 1965. But Singapore had been desperately poor then; crimes and violence were rife there; and massive riots were always taking place – riots by masses of unemployed youths.  The federal government frequently had to send large police and military forces there to tackle riots. One great riot in 1965 went on for three months. As a result, the Malaysian federal parliament voted unanimously in 1965 that the federation could no longer bear the burden of Singapore; and they expelled Singapore from the federation.

    Left to find its own way as a suddenly independent country in 1965, Singapore found itself in a terrible situation. It had no natural resources – no minerals, no farming land, no forest resources. The poverty was stifling. The youths milled nosily and violently in the streets. Food supply was in trouble. Businesses were fleeing the country. The man who suddenly found himself as leader of Singapore, Lee Kwan Yew, wept as he addressed his sad country. He said, “For me, this is a moment of anguish…“

    Yet, 10 years later, Singapore had become an unbelievable success story. I didn’t have enough money to see it for more than two days when I visited it in 1976. But I had a chance to visit it again in 1982, in the company of my colleague, Senator Lere Adesina. By this date, Singapore had become famous worldwide as one of the strongest economies in the world, one of the best places for investors to go and invest, one of the safest and cleanest places on earth.

    How did Singapore people achieve this revolution, this miracle? How did they do it in only about 10 years? First, Singapore was fortunate to have the right kind of leaders. I have studied Lee Kwan Yew’s story as leader of his country. I find that, in many respects, he was very much like our own Obafemi Awolowo. In these two leaders of men, the central secret was unswerving, undistracted, unstinted, devotion to the task of building a rich and great country. Neither of these two men allowed himself to be distracted by any desire to become rich. The unyielding focus of each was on progress, improvement, success of the fatherland. Like our Awolowo, Yew had the almost supernatural belief that any leader can build a great country from scratch in only a few years. In the years when we, under Chief Awolowo, were putting together the wonderful plans of the UPN for Nigeria – in moments of intense thinking and planning – Chief Awolowo used to say to us, “Look, we don’t need more than four years; in less than four years we can put Nigeria’s foot firmly on the path of stability, prosperity and power!”  Those words were like magical words. Many of us became imbued with the powerful faith that we could make our Nigeria a great country in just a few years.

    Obviously, that is what happened to the leaders and rulers of Singapore under Lee Kwan Yew. As they set out to embark on their economic miracle for their country, they firmly agreed upon one fundamental fact – namely, that to make their economic miracle possible at all, their country must have dependably orderly and stable political life. The political leaders must be disciplined, strictly respect the law, respect the legal boundaries of power, and have the greatest respect for due process in all actions of government. They went on to lead and rule in obedience to those principles. Orderly governance naturally stimulated an atmosphere of law and order, so that the security situation improved rapidly.

    With that, they emphasized work. A lot of the youths were educated, but most had no job skills. The government went massively into training programmes for modern job skills. Steadily, Singapore’s youths became a skilled work force.

    At the same time, the government devoted  efforts to promoting a business culture – various programmes to teach and encourage entrepreneurship;  to promote and assist small businesses;  to make loans and loan guarantees available to businesses through banks; plans (such as tax incentives, export incentives, etc) to attract investors to come and establish businesses in Singapore. They placed special emphasis on businesses that would produce high quality goods in Singapore for export to the biggest and most advanced markets in the world. Tax and other incentives ensured that Singapore’s businesses could export their high quality goods at low prices to the outside world. One of their ministers summarizes these policies as follows: “We are a small country with a small internal market… Our economic goal…is to create good jobs for our people by enabling Singapore’s businesses to take advantage of opportunities around the world. We are constantly asking ourselves what the markets (of the rich big countries) need, and how we can develop the capabilities to meet them. We want local as well as international companies to find it worthwhile to establish a presence and invest in Singapore”.

    The economy began to grow rapidly. Investors from the rich countries of the world hurried to go and invest in Singapore. Great banks, manufacturing establishments, commercial enterprises, arose. Singapore became able to embark on great infrastructural developments – great highways, bridges, water supply systems, massive sewage systems, port development, etc. By 1975, Singapore was already famous as one of the most successful of the world’s small countries – known around the world as “Asia’s success model”.

    As we sat under Chief Awolowo’s leadership in 1976-79 planning mightily for the UPN and Nigeria, we were sure we could achieve greater development for our country, and faster too. Well, we all remember what happened. We were denied the opportunity.

    I believe that most Nigerians would now agree that Nigeria is just too incoherent and too complex to allow any leaders to achieve this kind of progress for Nigeria. I am sure many would agree that it can be accomplished in smaller and compact countries like Yorubaland (what some youths are already calling Alafia Republic or Kajola Republic), Igboland (or Biafra), a carefully negotiated federation of the Delta, and even Hausaland. Why not try these – instead of continuing in poverty and conflicts?