Tag: summer

  • Huddersfield to sign Balogun in summer

    Premier League campaigners Huddersfield are reportedly ready to sign Super Eagles’ defender Leon Balogun at the end of the ongoing Premier League season.

    They are currently battling to escape relegation as they now occupy the 16th position on the table, but the club is said to be interested in signing Balogun regardless of where they play next term. The contract of Balogun who currently plays for German club FSC Mainz 05, will expire at the end of the season, and the 29-year-old defender will become a free agent.

    According to the report by UK Sun, Huddersfield’s chiefs and Balogun have discussed the possibility of the Nigeria international joining the club.

    After his contract with Bundesliga side Fortuna Düsseldorf had expired in summer 2014, he was without a club for three months until he joined Darmstadt 98. He signed a contract until the end of the 2014–15 season.

    Leon Balogun who was born to a Nigerian father and a German mother, was called up by Nigeria for a March 2014 friendly against Mexico, as a replacement for ex-Super Eagles’ captain Joseph Yobo. And since then, he has been an essential member of the current Super Eagles squad, and he is expected to be in Russia for the 2018 FIFA World Cup.

  • Indomie backs free summer school

    Dufil Prima Foods, makers of Indomie noodles, has donated cash and educational materials to the Lagos Empowerment and Resource Network (LEARN), to support is effort to positively impact the country’s educational sector through its free summer school initiative.

    Dufil’s Group Public Relations and Events Manager Tope Ashiwaju, at the presentation, said: “It is the main thrust of our company to prioritise educational development of the Nigerian child, with a strong belief that a quality academic opportunity should not elude them.

    “Indomie is known as one of the foremost brands with immense contribution to the development of education at all levels. We are committed to it because quality education is a legacy we owe our children since they are the future of tomorrow. As children, you should be the change you want to see because only you can determine path you want to chart for yourself.”

    Project Manager, LEARN Mrs. Aderonke Oguntoyinbo thanked Dufil for its unwavering commitment towards the LEARN initiative, describing it as very strategic and helpful.

    “This partnership has excited the children, having been assured of free lunch during the summer school, with study materials. This will help them concentrate on what they are being taught,” she added.

    Sulaimon Jamiu, who spoke on behalf of other pupils, thanked Dufil for its support in the last nine years. He urged the firm not to relent in ensuring that children get good education.

  • School promises exciting summer

    With the long holiday on hand, École Est Belle Academy, an International Montessori School offering crèche, nursery and primary education in Magodo, Lagos, has promised pupils an exciting summer school.

    Director of the school, Henry Onos, reiterated the school’s philosophy.

    He said: “Its main objective is to steer the education of our future generation in the right direction, with emphasis on setting the right foundation for the children.

    ‘’At Ecole Est Belle Academy, we believe that when the foundation of a child is right, the future of that child is secured, that explains our watch word as a school. That is why we have designed the best educational framework to secure the future of every Nigerian child and beyond during the holidays.’’

    The school, Ono said, runs a blend of British, American and Nigeria as well as the English National curriculum.

    “Our teachers are well-groomed, dedicated and qualified,” Ono said, adding that the school priortises pupils’ safety by installing CCTV everywhere.

  • Skye Bank Select Summer Campaign gathers momentum

    Skye Bank Select Summer Campaign gathers momentum

    The on-going Skye Select Summer campaign has continued to gain attention as members of the public have been opening account in large numbers.

    The Skye Select summer campaign offers a new investment window for discerning high-end individuals, who value personalised services and unique lifestyle. The campaign is targeted at the upper-middle level managers and professionals, who earn a monthly net income of N750,000 and above, and travel regularly.

    According to a statement by the bank, those who take advantage of the summer campaign to either open new accounts or build up their existing accounts would enjoy increased earnings via interest on their credit balances, and benefit from discounted interest rates on personal loans.

    Other benefits of the Skye Select account are free cheque book and the ability to make unlimited withdrawals from their accounts.

    The bank explained that other lifestyle benefits that customers would enjoy include exclusive discount at Hilton Hotel, Abuja, free priority pass membership and two free airport lounge visits per year.

    It further said customers would enjoy packaged holiday tours through its Skye Travel Finance in addition to being offered fast track services in designated branches, and would also be assigned dedicated relationship officers.

    Skye Select is an individual current account designed for discerning high-end individual customers who value personalised service and could afford a constant credit balance of N100, 000 in their accounts.

    It also gives benefits and values that are specific to the lifestyles of premium customers. Some of the target audience include: people who undertake frequent foreign trips, businessmen, top government officials and individuals who go on regular holy pilgrimages.

  • It’s another summer

    For some Nigerians, going abroad, even to a country with low fortune, fame and status, is the ultimate. By now, hundreds, if not thousands, of Nigerians are either booking their flights or are already abroad for what they often see and cherish as summer holidays. Yes, it’s another summer, and the rush from here is overwhelming!

    Nigerians travel out of their country for many reasons. Some, especially the elite, prefer going abroad for medical checkup. They prefer to take all that risk to treat even common cold, cough and catarrh! They gleefully label it as medical tourism. For others, going overseas is a yearly ritual that affords them the opportunity to re-unite with friends, families and business associates. And there is this critical mass that jet out, almost on a daily basis, sinking millions to seek greener pastures or the Golden Fleece as they call it. In all, those who make peremptory trips outside the country often do so with pains and great discomfort. They do so in most cases while “suffering and smiling”, as the legendary Fela Anikulapo-Kuti sang in one of his chartbusters.

    In the course of my public service and journalistic odyssey, I have garnered long years of experiences and chalked hundreds of thousands of kilometres crisscrossing the world. Some of those experiences have prodded me to share a little on the inconveniences, sometimes mind-numbing risks that many Nigerian travellers, go through just to have some summer freaks. While the youth see long haul flights as adventurous, the attendant stress and pains always have a telling effect on the old; senior citizens. They often experience unusually prolonged jet-lag, have swollen feet, experience some numbness in their limbs and joints, not to talk of the deafening effect of aircrafts on their ears.

    It is to our senior citizens I want to offer this advice. I need to give some useful tips for the elderly who may seem addicted to the long haul flights. First, it is not advisable to travel alone. If you can afford it, you need the company of your spouse or any of your children. Second, medical science has established that long haul trips can aggravate arthritis or thrombosis. In that case, sufferers are always advised to be well equipped with flight socks. The socks, which are often sold at duty free shops at most international airports, are clinically packaged to improve blood circulation. They are prepared to make travellers endure long hours on the plane, ultimately making users feel light and relieved of joints pains.

    Third, aged travellers must adequately fortify themselves with correct medication well ahead of an impending trip. Every traveller of age must avoid concentrating attention on watching movies or engaging in long hours of sleep onboard. It is imperative that at intervals, you must stretch your legs and body either by standing, or walking round the cabin, or engaging in mild body exercises. Travellers who stay glued to their seats are prone to stroke or deadly thrombosis.

    Travelers should be mindful that a well-planned journey makes your trip less stressful. Ahead of flying over 24 hours with stops, or 15 to 16 hours non-stop, purchase ticket which include hotel accommodation, most especially where a stop-over takes over six hours before connecting the next flight.

    Travelling long hours in a plane is energy sapping. It always results in jet lag which often times takes up to two to three days to shake off. The case is worse for anyone who might have contracted flu or suffers from the usual summer allergies that often induce cold, coughing, sneezing and blood shot eyes. In some cases, and from personal experiences, the allergies could take about two weeks before full recovery. The body will now battle with differences in time zones and climate change. While the sun is receding in the United States, for instance, we are moving towards dawn in Nigeria. Presently, in Europe and far Eastern countries, they are witnessing heavy rain falls and severe flooding. America is currently contending with high or humid temperature, which often requires the use of cooling devices.

    Perhaps, the only reward meant for Nigerians who travel out is their dream to better security, good infrastructure and facilities. For them, leaving Nigeria is a temporary good escape from the harsh realities that they have been battling with for years; the sneers of armed robbery, kidnapping, killings and bombings by Boko Haram and now, Niger Delta Avengers, police brutality, fuel scarcity, ‘NEPA’ failures, hike in prices of essential commodities, poor medical facilities and others!

    Travelling abroad for vacation may not be a bad idea but it can get scary when one discovers that time is an impatient customer. It flies so fast. For instance, four weeks of stay usually runs so fast you think you have just spent few days. In that regard, the thought of returning to inclement situations at home brings some pangs of heaviness or sadness. This is the crux of the matter. It is time for the government to start building solid infrastructures and facilities that would make Nigeria a beauty to behold and a place of allurement to seduce citizens to remain at home.

    Doing so will make the country a destination of choice for people from across the globe. After all HOME IS HOME.

    • From Folu Olamiti

    Abuja.

  • Ighalo: I won’t leave Watford in summer

    Ighalo: I won’t leave Watford in summer

    •Eagles’ forward celebrates  Crystal Palace win

    Watford striker, Odion Jude Ighalo has told SportingLife that he remains a player of the club even beyond the end of the season and that he never signed any agreement with them for him to be sold at the end of the season.

    An elated Ighalo said  he was thrilled that Watford returned to winning ways after the loss to Tottenham last week and that the three points have lifted them further on the league table.

    He told SportingLife that he decided to speak out denying the reports in some section of the media that he had sealed a pact with the owners of Watford to walk away from the club at the end of the season if any club matched his asking price.

    Ighalo revealed that he was never bothered throughout the January transfer window when he was linked to several clubs including his boyhood club, Manchester United, Liverpool and a club in China.

    He said he only concentrated on Watford and their quest to retain their premier league identity at the end of the season and to do well also in the FA Cup.

    “I want to put it on record that I didn’t sign any agreement with anybody to leave Watford at the end of the season because I don’t know anything about that. I didn’t allow the transfer speculation to affect my performance for Watford too.

    “The victory at Crystal Palace was very important after the loss to Tottenham and the draw at home to Chelsea. I am happy for Troy Deeney, he was very fantastic in the match and I hope we can get more of these victories in the coming games,” Ighalo told SportingLife.

  • UAC ends summer school programme

    UAC ends summer school programme

    This year’s edition of the UAC Free Weekend Classes initiative organised for secondary school pupils ended with commendations for the value of the programme.

    The organisers, UAC of Nigeria Plc, are also impressed about the turnout of pupils for the programme at the centres at Lanre Awolokun Senior Secondary School, Gbagada and Newland Senior Secondary School inside the Tolu Schools Complex, Ajegunle in Lagos.

    Speaking during the rounding-off  of the seven-week initiative at the centres in Lagos, the Executive Director, Corporate Services, UAC Of Nigeria PLC, Mr Joe Dada, said the company was encouraged by the growing popularity of the programme among pupils in Lagos. The Free Weekend Classes is free to the beneficiaries.

    He was, particularly, happy that many of the pupils that registered were from the Senior Secondary Schools (SSS) the target of the initiative.

    “Since 2008, our company has been ‘doing good’ – in line with UAC’s corporate tagline-and leading from the front in the grand march to stem the tide of increasing deterioration of the education infrastructure and programmes in our country,” he said. The pupils were taught English, Mathematics, Physics, Chemistry, Biology, and Accounts by employees of the managers under its Volunteer Scheme.

    They also enjoyed career counseling sessions to prepare them to make the right career choices.

    Dada called on other companies and Nigerians to join the march “towards lifting our country out of the mire of backwardness and underdevelopment, which the deterioration in the education sector portends, especially among youths.”

     

  • Singer Easy Lizzy, partner plan free summer classes

    Singer Easy Lizzy, partner plan free summer classes

    Upcoming singer and event planner, Taiwo Elizabeth Olapeju, aka Eazy Lizzy is fulfilling her other dreams in life, through a free summer programme for youths in three local government areas of Lagos State.

    The project, The Community Initiative for Child Education is in partnership with Hon Ayo Adesanya, the initiator of the programme.

    Speaking to The Nation, Easy Lizzy revealed that the organisation is set for a seminar tagged, Security Challenges of the Nigerian Child in Recent Times, noting that the program will run in three locations including Nathan Primary School, 24 Nathan Street, Surulere, on September 1, 2015; Alimosho LGA African Church Nursery and Primary School, Mosan, on September 2, 2015; and Isolo LCDA Secretariat, Osolo way, Isolo, on September 3, 2015.

    Eazy Lizzy is a dynamic and compassionate young lady who has an abiding love for disadvantaged youths, especially girls. She recently added youth education and empowerment to her schedule of duties as an entertainer.

    She revealed that from its humble beginnings, nine years ago, with 45 students at Nathan Primary school, Surulere, the non-profit organization has grown to giving free summer coaching services to over one thousand youths in three locations in Lagos.

    The founder; Hon Adesanya, is a self confessed lover of children who started the summer program with the aim of keeping young people engaged during the holidays, and keeping them out of danger.

    According to Adesanya, “Nine years ago, a young child in my vicinity died in an accident due to unsupervised play during the holidays, and that deeply affected me. I believed that the boy died because he was not supervised because his mother was away at work. Had he been in school, it would not have happened,” he said.

    Commenting on the challenges he faced as a young, unemployed graduate, just starting a non-profit organisation, he said, “We started with volunteers because we could not afford to pay quality graduate teachers.  I had to buy chalk from my pocket, and also had to arrange to watch the infant siblings of our students, as some parents made it clear that it was the only condition under which they would release their teenage children who were responsible for taking care of their younger siblings in the absence of their parents.”

  • FirstBank, PayPal partner on summer travels

    FirstBank of Nigeria is banking on its new partnership with PayPal to make life easier for its customers who will travel during this summer.

    The bank hopes that the travellers through it can pay and get paid globally and seamlessly.

    “Now we finally have an online payment solution accepted all over the world, courtesy of a new strategic partnership between First Bank of Nigeria and PayPal,” the bank said.

    Banking on PayPal’s over 148 million accounts in 26 currencies spread over 203 markets around the world and its strategic advantage in Nigeria as a leading Nigerian commercial bank with over 750 branches across Nigeria with cards accepted in over 200 countries and on millions of POS terminals and ATMs around the world, the brand managers of the bank believe “the arrival of PayPal in Nigeria allows PayPal connect Nigerians to merchants from Asia, North America, Europe and beyond. So, finally, we can do online transactions on almost every site (since PayPal is a popular global online payment platform anyway), however, PayPal accounts have a transaction limit of about $250 until the account is verified. This is where FirstBank comes in!”

    The Chief Executive Officer,  FirstBank, Bisi Onasanya, said at the launch of the Paypal e-commerce Payment Solution, that the bank is driven by the quest to provide the best financial services possible to its customers. He is optimistic that this venture with Paypal would make far-reaching impact on the lives of the bank’s customers in particular and the entire people of Nigeria in general.

    According to him, it is necessary at this time of accelerating e-commerce evolution in Nigeria and it is equally noteworthy, that it is in sync with FirstBank’s enhanced service solutions for its SME, e-business, mobile banking and online banking customers.

    “First Bank is celebrating 120 years of doing business in Nigeria,” explained Onasanya. “Ours has been a continuously exciting journey highlighted by a remarkable and enduring legacy of unparalleled development and sustainability. We are indeed proud to have built a heritage brand easily recognisable for its dependability, dynamism, stability, longevity and innovation.”

    He also explained that FirstBank has established diverse operations in the financial services industry, with over 750 widespread service outlets, enabling its emergence as the foremost financial services provider in Nigeria.

    “I am, especially, delighted that our subsidiaries, within and outside the country, are making enormous contributions to the growth and development of their national economies, to the delight of all our stakeholders.

    “In expanding our scope in the e-commerce and money transfer subsector, we have carefully identified PayPal due to its pedigree and robust success, achieved since inception 12 years ago, as a major consumer-to-consumer remittance company worthy of our partnership,” he said.

    He further said the pedigree of Paypal, one of the world’s leading e-commerce payment platforms, has developed a fast, reliable and secure system, with expansive global operations. In the rapidly globalising world, an e-commerce payment solution requires the energising competitive environment presented by a rapidly growing company like PayPal, with quite impressive growth statistics, enabling its customers to send, receive, and hold funds globally, he added.

    Also, PayPal’s Regional Director for Africa and Israel, Efi Dahan, also said: “Millions of Nigerians already shop on websites in the US, UK or China, but many find their cards are rejected or have concerns about entering their credit card details on the website of a seller based overseas. PayPal is used by hundreds of millions of people around the world to make international payments because PayPal payments are trusted by international retailers and we don’t share your financial details with anyone.

    “This exclusive partnership with FirstBank is a major milestone in PayPal’s Africa growth story and we hope to make more announcements together in the future as our partnership develops,”Dahan said.

     

  • Arik Air introduces summer timings on Lagos-Jo’burg route

    Arik Air introduces summer timings on Lagos-Jo’burg route

    Arik Air  has introduced new summer timings on the Lagos- Johannesburg route,  its spokesman,  Mr Ola Banji said yesterday.

    He said  baggage allowance on the route has been increased for both Premier and Economy Class passengers.

    With the new timings which came into effect on June 15 this year,  outbound daily flights now depart the Murtala Muhammed International Airport, Lagos and arrive into the OR Tambo International Airport, Johannesburg. Inbound flights will leave Johannesburg and arrive into Lagos at  next day.

    He said new baggage allowance, Premier and Economy class passengers from Lagos to Johannesburg can  now carry three pieces of luggage each with Premier passengers allowed a maximum weight of 32kg per piece and Economy passengers 23kg per piece.