Tag: Sun

  • Ex-Sun Director named Special Adviser to Ajimobi

    Ex-Sun Director named Special Adviser to Ajimobi

    The Oyo state governor, Senator Abiola Ajimobi has approved the appointment of a former Executive Director of Sun Newspaper, Mr. Bolaji Tunji, as Special Adviser, Communication and Strategy.

    His appointment was announced in a statement by the Secretary to the State Government, Mr. Olalekan Alli, who also named former Special Adviser, Communication and Strategy to Governor Ajomobi,  Mr. Yomi Layinka, as Special Adviser, Ibadan Media City Project.

    An alumnus of the Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile Ife, the new governor’s spokesman was the pioneer Managing Director/Editor-in-Chief of the New Telegraph newspaper.

    He began his journalism career at the Guardian newspaper in March 1993, from where he joined the Daily Independent newspaper as pioneer deputy news editor in 2001 and had a meteoric rise to the position of an Editor.

    Tunji also had a stint with the Daily Times before joining the defunct Comet newspaper, which later metamorphosed into The Nation Newspaper.

    At the Nation, he was the pioneer editor of the Saturday title, before joining the repackaged National Mirror as pioneer Sunday Editor and later Editor of the National Mirror.

    By this appointment, he said Layinka is expected to oversee the proposed transformation of the Broadcasting Corporation of Oyo State into a massive and formidable media, entertainment and cultural hub for South-West Nigeria.

    Layinka, a veteran broadcaster, is being saddled with a new responsibility of transforming the corporation into a hub that would include television and radio broadcasting production studios, theme parks/resorts, hospitality centre, a media academy and hosting venue for major live events in the sub-region.

  • Shadows of a setting Sun

    Hardball is downcast, he is sad and distraught. Why would this often feisty fellow go gloomy today and why for that matter, would that be the vicarious burden of you, our dear reader? Pertinent questions but first, Hardball is human too and at that, a mere, clay-footed mortal who is also deeply enmeshed in the daily yings and yangs of life. Now coupled with the fact that he has to pummel his grey matter everyday to keep this space warm, would sure take its toll on him sooner.

    Nevertheless, these are not the reasons one is saddened and full of despair. Hardball’s heart is heavy not because he is bereaved, no. He is en-drossed by the gross abuse of the noble profession of journalism and the general state of dishevelment of the industry in Nigeria. This is especially as it concerns the print media; the written word club, which is the grandfather of all media of communication.

    No, it is not the incipient barrage of muck from the social media and the horde of barbarians at its gate threatening to tear down the communications sphere. Not even the pecuniary trauma some colleagues are going through currently is as troubling. The lack of payment of salaries for up to 12 months or more in some newspaper houses is heart-rending enough, but not as much as the scourge of platform abuse as witnessed in the Saturday Sun of October 10, 2015.

    The report (more like reproach), which was promoted on the front page as the second lead (second most important story) came with characteristic screaming headline: “Tinubu under security watch”, with a strap: “Over alleged plot against Buhari”. The front page heist came with a photograph of the ‘victim’ and snazzy graphic design for devious effects.

    Inside, on page 35, the ‘report’ is patently false and famished of any facts that it must be clipped by all journalism schools in Nigeria and presented as a case study of dubious journalism.

    The 14-paragraph banality insists that Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, the leader of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC), is under security watch over alleged plot against President Muhammadu Buhari. In this business, we know about political punditry and we know outright premeditated fabrications and wicked lies carefully written and presented as informed reports.

    Saturday Sun ‘report’ in question is one such foul reproach to journalism that must be highlighted for the fraud it is. Even when the presidency responded immediately that there was no such security watch on Tinubu, the newspaper stood by its concoctions; electing to dance in its vomit.

    A newspaper will diminish and eventually extirpate itself when it begins to present wholesale fabrications and blatant lies on its front page as if they were factual stories. We are not talking about misjudgment or skewed presentation or biased slant. We speak of outright unconscionable LIES!

    Readers cannot be that stupid not to discern the difference; at least not all of them. You can only take them for a ride for so long. It is obvious that overbearing proprietary interest is inveigling on the professional integrity of the stable. But someday soon, Nigerians will begin to call to question, the capacity of some persons to own certain media of public information.

    That scam (that is what it is) of October 10 is portentous, it is a pock-mark that may prove indelible…

  • Kidnappers free The Sun DMD’s wife

    Kidnappers free The Sun DMD’s wife

    After spending two days in kidnappers’ den, the wife of The Sun’s Deputy Managing Director ( DMD ), Steve Nwosu, Toyin, was in the early hours of Thursday freed.

    She was abandoned by her abductors at Festac First Gate, Amuwo Odofin, where the police recovered her at about 2:20am.

    The heavily armed kidnappers had whisked her away from her Ago Palace residence in Okota on Monday at about 1:50am, with a speed boat, after robbing her family and two other houses.

    Confirming her release, the state Commissioner of Police, Fatai Owoseni said efforts were in top gear to arrest the suspects.

    “Yes we rescued her at about 2:20am. The criminals left her at First Gate, Festac, where we were told to go and pick her up.

    “No ransom was paid. I want to assure Lagosians that efforts are still on to arrest the suspect and bring them to justice.

    “We are appealing for people to not hesitate in providing the police with useful information that will help in containing crime and criminality in the state,” he said.

  • Sun’s Deputy MD’s wife abducted

    Sun’s Deputy MD’s wife abducted

    Toyin, the wife of the Deputy Managing Director of Sun newspapers, Steve Nwosu, has been abducted.
    She was reportedly abducted in their home in Okota, Lagos on Monday at about 2:30am.
    Steve who confirmed her wife’s abduction said the abductors are yet to contact him as at 9am on Monday.

  • Outage forces LUTH to expose babies to sun

    Outage forces LUTH to expose babies to sun

    The fuel crisis ravaging the country has paralysed medical and diagnostic activities at the Lagos University Teaching Hospital (LUTH), Idi Araba.

    There is neither electricity nor fuel to power most life saving equipments, operate the theatre and intervene in emergency cases.

    Neonates being treated for jaundice and other neonatal diseases, put in the incubators, are brought into the open air and exposed to early morning sunlight to give them warmth, with their mothers told to monitor them.

    The Triage at the Accident and Emergency unit is a shadow of its frenzy and pro-activeness.

    Hence operations slated for the week are cancelled. Likewise, most patients on life saving equipments are deteriorating or gone into coma.

    A medic venting his anger said: “It is difficult to do any meaningful thing due to this crisis. General resuscitation is difficult as there is no light to do intubations or operate the suction machine.

    “A male patient died due to severe sepsis because we could not carry out life saving interventions on him. It is so pathetic”.

    Another source said: “We are trained to save lives. But it is saddening that after doing our best to save a patient, the patient dies because treatment is interrupted; it is harrowing to one as a care provider.

    “Most of us trek and report at our duty posts. Yet despite the commitments, the prevailing circumstances are disheartening. The situation is so bad that we use torchlight and our mobile phones to ameliorate the sufferings of clients. “There are some tests and screenings that are power based, and since there are no light or alternatives, there is nothing anybody can do.

    A nurse who could not hold back emotion added: “The experience is not palatable at all. We are trying our best in this situation. We are risking our lives and giving up our comfort to ensure patients are attended to.

    “We trek some kilometers to get here or pay triples transportation fare. And last month’s salary was just paid last week.

    “Some babies were brought out to the corridors to receive the early morning sunlight because there was no electricity to power their incubators. The sun rays will provide phototherapy. This obtains in all the units we have children being treated for jaundice. We have being doing that since last week, but the peak was today (yesterday).

    “No new patients are being taken in. The Triage is coping but no diesel or back up power to assist the workers. This is not peculiar to LUTH; we are just exploring options to cope better.”

    A representative of the engineering department said it was stressful coping with the situation. “We have gone round trying to ensure sensitive equipments do not break down and also see how we can power life saving equipments.

    “We are drained of both human energy and fuel/diesel alternatives. The hospital is in blackout. To get diesel or petrol is a difficult task. Management is trying its best, but there is no hope for patients in the theatre, ICU or other sensitive units and departments unless we have access to power by any good means”.

    The Chief Medical Director (CMD), Prof Chris Bode said his hospital is on top of the situation by providing skeletal services since the weekend.

    “The stock of diesel and fuel diminished and we have been able to keep services up at the Intensive care unit (ICU) and the Neonatal ICU. We are awaiting delivery of diesel bought at an exorbitant rate to perform some operations slated and some other emergencies.

    “As Nigerians, we have to bear the situation and hopefully opt out of the situation. The workers have been coming to work, some paying exorbitant fares just to keep the system running. Hospitals cannot close down be it during national emergencies or crisis so we are on, doing our best.

    “We cannot shut down the hospital because the fuel or diesel is high. We must keep the hospital running, nothing will be grounded. We are trained to do our best and we must treat no matter what. This is a temporary situation it will end,” he said.

     

  • Southern Sun Ikoyi woos lovers

    Southern Sun Hotel Ikoyi is wooing lovers for today’s Valentine’s Day with a special package.

    Speaking about the special offer for this year’s romantic celebrations, the hotel’s Sales and PR Manager, Ubong Nseobot, stated that “this year’s offer is designed to encourage individuals to spend valuable and quality time with their significant other,” adding that “in today’s busy world, this is one of the best gifts one can give and receive”.

    This year’s Valentine’s Day and weekend offer will commence yesterday and continue until next Tuesday. Couples are offered a wonderfully chic and uncluttered room for a bed and breakfast stay. She said offer included a dinner menu created with the freshest seasonal ingredients. She added: “ In crowning efforts made for this year’s romantic celebrations, the hotel’s restaurant chef will display his exceptional culinary skills with a truly special, spectacular and memorable sea food buffet in addition to the hotel providing tailor-made services for guests who desire to enjoy a more intimate and exclusive celebration.”

    In finely complementing the chef’s special romantic menu, an assortment of unique wines and cocktails will rejuvenate the palates, making this year’s romantic day and weekend at the Southern Sun Ikoyi a truly fine affair.

  • Jonathan’s sun sets in the East

    President Goodluck Jonathan has missed being the sun of the nation’s life and that of the pit of degradation, called the Niger Delta. Everlasting night has settled upon Nigeria, spurred by moral

    bankruptcy and the clueless chaos of his governance. There is nothing his administration has done that inspires hope in the people within the last six years.

    Nigerians have grown accustomed to the deafening cacophonies of missing billions in the oil sector and the NNPC accounts, pension fund looting, oil bunkering, abandoned projects, devaluation of the

    nation’s currency, spilling of innocent blood by the nihilist Boko Haram militias etc. Most of all, mega-corruption and the government’s inability to tame the bloodcurdling insurgents Boko Haram has been President Jonathan’s undoing.

    He could not use his “Omnipotent Government” to suppress the vices because he is a beneficiary of the self-inflicted crises. President Jonathan’s government has been a major source of mischief and disaster ever witnessed in Nigeria. Granted that the worst evils which mankind ever had to endure were inflicted by governments in human history, but there come a time the people strive for change, and the time is now.

    The above statement was echoed – not exactly the same – by no less a personage than the fierce and fire-spitting Catholic Priest Rev. Ejike Mbaka. The iron cast priest obviously ventilated Ludwig Von Mises, the Austrian School economist, sociologist, and classical liberal who became prominent for his work in praxeology, a deductive study of human choice and action. “There is no more dangerous menace to civilisation than a government of incompetent, corrupt, or vile men”, Von said.

    Rev. Mbaka hits the bull’s eye when he told President Jonathan the stark truth he hates to hear: “What is the fate of our children? Tears fill my eyes when I see our young graduates hoping and walking our streets. What is the meaning of kidnapping? Kidnapping is the grandson of unemployment. Boko Haram is a great grand child of the same unemployment, mass looting, and poor governance”.

    “President Jonathan cannot lead Nigeria. As things stand right now, from the oracle of the Holy Spirit, Jonathan should honourably resign quietly and let Nigeria be. The destiny of Nigeria is greater than

    Goodluck Jonathan. The Goodluck in Jonathan has become a bad luck to Nigerians. Whatever brought him in should send him back and let Nigeria be. By this time in few months to come, many are going to lose their jobs and there is no alternative”

    “During election, Jonathan will answer Azikiwe, Ebele and become an Igbo man and after election, the Ebele, the Azikiwe and Goodluck will vanish from his identity. Who is fooling who actually? Look at our federal roads, we are not even asking for new ones, roads built by Buhari and Babangidas — the so called Hausa people— cannot be maintained. Follow Enugu here to Onitsha, children born some years ago do not know that there was a lane along the other side of Isiagwu and we are all saying continue. The continuity of Jonathan means disaster to Nigeria”.

    “When there is no road, no power, all this fake promises… where is the power? That Onitsha Bridge, has it now been built? No. After six years, and Goodluck has what it takes to do whatever. He surrounded himself with hooligans. By the time he comes down, he won’t have anybody to

    work with. He played himself into the hands of hooligans. My interest is about the wellness of this country. Nigeria must survive. What we are passing through is by the help of God. The same

    God who saved us from Ebola will save us from this bad luck season”.

    “Look at it, there was a time there was an argument about pension fund – such billions. Who is talking about it now? Billions and we were hearing it… from excess crude oil money, where is the impact of the excess crude oil money? Now from oil boom, it has met a bad luck; it’s now oil doom. If my father will be my leader and my siblings will all die, let a stranger be my leader and let my family be”, Rev. Mbaka said.

    I quoted the Catholic Priest at great length because of his religious standing, his following, his geopolitical firmament and the ethno-religious sentiments that have dampened Nigeria political

    growth. Political leaders who failed to fulfil electoral promises to the electorate deliberately appeal or exploit ethnocentric and religious sentiments of their selfish gains in sections of the country. No Nigerian leader has gained popularity through divisive politicking, ethno-religious grandstanding than President Goodluck Jonathan. Then what is government if it is not to promote human happiness and welfare?

    All the blemishes plaguing this administration came as a result of the parasitic sycophants who give the president a halo of false glory and are hell-bent on feasting dangerously on the nation’s easy oil wealth.

    The reason, lamentably, is that Jonathan didn’t attain ideological maturation before he found himself in the corridors of power. He is being goaded on by dint of virtual providence and veritable luck.

    Minds more developed and ideologically balanced have proved that one of the greatest bequests to modern civilisation and governance is not entirely humility, but a great deal of granite hardness, as the need arises to trample on closest friends who stand in the way of the masses.

    With one stroke of abhorrence for corruption, President Jonathan could have transformed Nigeria. In President Jonathan’s administration, Nigerians have lost one of the nation’s supposed great educationist whose products we have not yet found in our time their fullest use, to corruption! He missed the chance to wear the cap described in Mein Kampf, The Struggle Of My Life:

    “From millions of men, one man must step forward who with apodictic force will form granite principles from the wavering idea-world of the broad masses and take up the struggle for their sole correctness, until the shifting waves of a free thought-world there will arise a brazen cliff of solid unity in faith and will”. World-historical men – the Heroes of an epoch – must therefore be recognised as its clear-sighted ones, their deeds, their worlds are the best of their time”.

    You can now gauge why President Goodluck Jonathan government is beset by treachery, overwhelmed by violence visited on it by the Boko Haram, drown in blood and will go up in flames in an orgy of self-willed annihilation which will answer some terrible longing question in the minds of Nigeria. The President who ought to be a man of staggering political genius, an incredible reformer by the reason of his education and experience has yielded to crass opportunism and mega-corruption.

    Which ever way, President Jonathan’s sun has set at midnight in the Eastern part of Nigeria, at the Adoration Ground, where he holds a portion of the nation to a grand illusion of oneness and slavish

    • Ikhide wrote in from Lagos.
  • Southern Sun Ikoyi sponsors boat competition

    Lagos Yacht Club recently held the fourth edition of its annual boat completion, Southern Sun Ikoyi Hotel Off shore Challenge. The annual event sponsored by the Southern Sun Ikoyi Hotel is an opportunity for members of the club to engage in boat competition and celebrate the aquatic endowment of Lagos.

    The general manager of the Southern Sun Ikoyi said the hosting of the event is part of the efforts to give back to the society and also use the platform as an opportunity to network and wrap up business. He said: “In all, 24 boats participated in the challenge. At the end of the event prizes were awarded for winners while others enjoy an idyllic evening out on the bank of the Lagos lagoon. Eight actually finished the course and I think they should be congratulated for doing that. Among the hobbies in the third place with boat number 1228, Blow Jeep,”

    In this year’s edition, the sailors had it a little rough as the hitherto favourable wind changed, making it difficult for the sailors, despite that; they still had a wonderful day. After the boats returned back to the club, prizes were awarded to the winners.

    The Southern Sun General manager, Mr. Mark Snoxley spoke on his company’s sponsorship of the competition: “The company is very sports orientate. It is for business purposes mostly for PR and marketing. We basically do this for business networking.

    It has been very successful and people enjoy the event. It gives the hotel the opportunity to showcase its hospitality. The chef comes in to lovely snacks and small chops.

    The club’s commodore, Mr. Michael Barnes described the event as highly successful. He commended the hotel for the sponsorship. The South African Deputy High commissioner, Thandi Mgxwati also applauded the hotel for the sponsorship. She said:

    “As the South African embassy, we support all our South African businesses. It actually shows that they are not only here for business but to strike a relationship with the people. And we will always support that.  Today’s event was a success although it has its own challenges because of the weather. We know that at some point, the people that sailed off just didn’t have an enough wind to return. I think it was exciting event to watch as it also exposes us to that other challenges the seamen actually comes across when they are offshore . It was a success because everybody came back safe and we are happy to see that everybody is happy.”

  • Okorocha sympathises with Sun

    Okorocha sympathises with Sun

    Imo State Governor Rochas Okorocha has, on behalf of the government and people of the state, expressed regret over the death of the Vice-Chairman of the Sun Publishing Ltd, Mr. Dimgba Igwe.

    He said Igwe’s death at 58 last Saturday taught a lesson about life that “we all live at the mercy of God.”

    The governor said: “Given the option, Mr. Igwe would have preferred to remain alive, but he was not offered that alternative by his creator.

    “Politicians and political office holders, who talk and act as if the world belongs to them, should learn a big lesson from Igwe’s death.”

  • Ambode commiserates with Sun

    Ambode commiserates with Sun

    A chieftain of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Mr. Akinwumi Ambode, has commiserated with the Sun Publishing Ltd on the sudden death of the Vice-Chairman, Mr. Dimgba Igwe.

    He described the death as an irreparable loss to journalism and to Nigerians.

    The former accountant- general of Lagos State, in a statement by his Special Adviser on Communication, Mr. Idowu Ajanaju, said: “We can only be consoled by the fact that Igwe lived his life using his God-given talents and gifts for the benefits of the masses through his writings and diligence in the management of one of the foremost Nigerian newspapers.”

    He prayed for the management, workers of the Sun and the deceased’s family, saying God would grant them the fortitude to bear the loss.

    Ambode said the transient nature of life was brought to the fore and advised that men ought to live their lives in the consciousness of this fact.