Tag: Sunday

  • Intercontinental adds Sunday Brunch

    Intercontinental Hotel, Lagos is currently providing families in Lagos a chance for quality weekend outdoor dining. The culinary offering by the hotel includes champagne and international dishes from different parts of the world.

    The idea, according to the hotel, is to give both locals and foreign guests opportunity to enjoy meals from different parts of the world.

    Speaking on the innovation at the hotel, Mr. Ahmed Raza, the director of food and beverages, said: “What we want to promote is family festivity each week. We want the families to come here and have a great time with the music, the children activities that we have, with the dishes that we have that represent Nigerian, Italian, Indian favorites; we have cuisines from all around the world.

    “It is just for the families to come around, have a great meal, and enjoy their time together every week. That is what we are aiming at. Sunday Brunch is a meal where people get together and  celebrate every week. “

    The Sunday Brunch has turned the Ekaabo Restaurant of the hotel into a beehive of merriment with live music .

    Raza said the new offering has been successful: “The culinary experience is coming very strong because what we have done is to merge all the flavours . We have a lot of strong chefs with us. We have Italian chefs, pastry chefs, Chinese chefs and a very strong group of local chefs.

    “Fusing all these chefs together is making a lot of difference that is really setting us apart. We are offering a wide range of varieties at Intercontinental that is strong point for us. At Sunday Brunch, we bring all these flavours together at one platform. That is why people are coming back to us each week because when they come to Intercontinental, they get the  fflavour of everything, especially the Nigerian flavours which are improving day by day,”Raza said.

    He said to make the Sunday Brunch even more satisfying for in-house guests and visitors, the hotel is providing champagne.

    “Champagne is a sign of celebration. When people come, they get complimentary champagne with the meal. We are partnering Taittinger Champagne, and by tying up with them, we want to give our guests the best of Champagne. When they come in, they are going to have welcome Champagne which is of top notch brand. Like I said we are celebrating, and when families come in to celebrate, what better way to celebrate with a bottle of champagne. The champagne is complimentary, “he said.

    On the cost, he said: “We are pricing it keeping competition in mind and the good news is that kids under the age of five eat for free. And during the Sunday Brunch we have one deal or the other up, like during the Father’s Day, fathers would eat 50 per cent off.

    “Sunday Brunch is one particular meal that we are getting a lot of outside guests. Also in-house guests also like to come and have a good time, but mostly it is the out-side guests. Pricing has never been a problem for them because they really have value for money-music, champagne and wide variety of food. For them, the value is already there”.

    One of the chefs, Chef Samson Balogun, spoke more on the Sunday Brunch: “From what we have, the number of people coming that we have been receiving for our Sunday Brunch has been increasing”.

    Asked if it was a special, he said it was as if you are having meals from five different regions.

    Also there was always the chef’s special which Balogun explained thus: “‘It is a secret recipe. This is what we sit down and create. It is not what every other hotel or someone out there is doing. We sit down and discuss and for example say: ‘ok, this is the rice, how do we make it distinct and tasty. By the time we come out with ideas, let’s add this and this and do it like this, we will come out with special. Every week we have something different.

  • NiMet predicts dust-hazy weather conditions for Sunday

    The Nigerian Meteorological Agency (NiMet) forecasts dust- hazy weather condition in the central states of the country on Sunday.

    The forecast is contained in the Weather Outlook issued by NiMet’s Central Forecast Office on Saturday in Abuja.

    It says there will be localised visibility of 2,000 metres or less over the central region during the forecast period.

    NiMet also forecasts that the coastal areas will experience dust-hazy conditions throughout the forecast period.

    It forecasts further that inland areas will experience dust hazy conditions throughout the forecast period.

    NiMet further says the northern states will experience dust-hazy with visibility range of less than 1,000 metres.

  • Tunisians Elect President For First Time

    Tunisians Elect President For First Time

    In just the third free election since the early 2011 revolution in Tunisia that ended the 10 year regime of autocrat Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali, Tunisians will on Sunday vote for a new president.
    A total of 27 candidates are vying for office but a race is emerging between a rights activist who says the election is a chance to stop the return of old-regime stalwarts and a veteran ex-Ben Ali official.
    According to statistics from the Tunisian electoral commission, out of the 5.2 million citizens who are eligible to cast ballot in the presidential election, 1.2 million registered voters are concentrated in capital Tunis and the provinces of Manouba, Ariana and Ben Arous.
    Meanwhile, next to this areas are the southeastern Sfax 1 and 2 electoral districts with some 441,000 registered voters, while the eastern Nabeul 1 and 2 districts have a combined 370,000 voters.
    However, just after about three years after the end of Ben Ali’s one-party rule, Tunisia has become a model of transition for the region by adopting a new constitution and avoiding the turmoil facing its neighbours.
    The election is an aftermath of a general election in October when the main secular Nidaa Tounes party won the most seats in the parliament, besting the Islamist party Ennahda that won the first free poll in 2011.
    Among the 27 presidential candidates, two candidates appear to be the frontrunners in the upcoming polls — interim President Moncef Marzouki, who was voted into office a few months after Ben Ali’s ouster by members of the elected Constituent Assembly, and Beji Caid Essebsi, who served as parliament speaker under Ben Ali.
    Lead by Essebsi, the Nidaa Tounes Party clinched the most seats by a single party in last month’s parliamentary polls, winning 86 seats. Nidaa’s victory knocked Ennahda into second place with 69 seats, according to definitive official results.
    With about 70% turnout of registered voters, the Free Patriotic Union (UPL), led by entrepreneur Slim Riahi, emerged third with 16 seats in the election to the 217-member parliament while the leftist coalition Popular Front coalition took 15, while another 15 parties divided up the balance.

  • UNIAGRIC students mark cultural Sunday

    The St John Paul Second Catholic Chaplaincy of the Federal University of Makurdi was agog with fanfare as the students celebrated their First Cultural Sunday at the James Ayatse Hall of the institution.

    The students, who were clad in different cultural attires, turned en masse to participate in the event.

    The event started at 8:30am while readings of the mass was rendered in different dialects, including Tiv, Idoma, Igbo, Yoruba, Hausa and Igede by student representing their tribes.

    The officiating priest, Dr Didacus Kajo, reiterated the need for strengthening weak gaps along the lines of ethnicity through unity. He urged the students to shun ethnic sentiments in choosing life partners.

    “You must not say you must marry from your own tribe. Resist tribalism. Unity is strength in diversity,” he said.

    In a bid to show case their cultural heritage, each ethnic group danced to the altar as thanksgiving to God. The Hausa community thrilled the congregation the most with their dance steps amidst applause from the crowd.

    A reception was followed immediately after the mass where students of different ethnic groups exhibited dance steps and a display of culinary skills with various local delicacies.

    Speaking to CAMPUSLIFE, Jude Tarnongo, 200-Level Science Education, said: “This is the day I have been looking up to. I am delighted to represent my Tiv people. I hope the cultural Sunday will continue in subsequent years.”

  • The man Dimgba Igwe

    The man Dimgba Igwe

    Frontline journalist and one of Nigeria’s foremost media administrators and author, Pastor Dimgba Igwe, who died yesterday has sent shock waves across the media industry.

    He was known to many people at home and abroad largely because of his total devotion to his first love, journalism – for the past 30 years. Dimgba Igwe, ace journalist, publisher, author, biographer and pastor, was a role model to many practising and aspiring journalists. Along with his long-time journalist friend and business partner, Mike Awoyinfa, he had mid-wifed some hugely successful newspapers, including the now rested Weekend Concord, The Sun and lately Entertainment Express and Sunday Express respectively.

    After the pioneering roles they played at the now rested Weekend Concord newspaper and The Sun newspapers, in 2011, Dimgba Igwe and Awonyinfa set about recording another landmark in the Nigerian media with the establishment of a newspaper entirely devoted to reporting the entertainment industry called Entertainment Express.

    The newspaper hit the newsstand in June 2011. The duo were still engrossed in taking their new project to Olympian height when death came calling yesterday.

    After a pioneering role they played at the now rested Weekend Concord newspaper where they distinguished themselves as journalists par excellence and lately, The Sun newspapers, Mike Awoyinfa and his friend, Dimgba Igwe are set to record another landmark in the Nigerian media with the establishment of a newspaper entirely devoted to reporting the entertainment industry.

    He  met his co-traveller, Mike Awoyinfa, at the Sunday Concord newspaper, and ever since then, they have been long standing friends. According to Igwe, “We discovered we are kindred spirits.” Speaking about the late Publisher recently, Awoyinfa said, “Dimgba complements my weaknesses, he adds to my strength. Only God knows why we came the way we are, even twins are not that close. We lean on each other and celebrate and mourn our woes together. We do everything together and I learn everyday from him, because he has his own areas where he is stronger than myself. Intellectually and spiritually, he is above me in certain respects.  Sometimes, we do disagree to agree again, we know how to tolerate ourselves and we are not the greedy type,” Awoyinfa described his late friend.

    The late Igwe was a hard worker. To many staffers at the outfits he managed while alive, he was something close to a slave driver. He loves to work and had actually planned to keep working for as long as his legs can carry him. To him, the idea of retirement was a strange one.

    “Basically, when you say that you have retired, it is just a way of describing the fact that you are no more in paid employment, where you go to work at a certain time and return home later in the day; and at the end of the month, you are paid by that particular medium. No! It could also mean a transition to a different aspect of life. One plays some roles at the board level as in the case of The Sun newspapers or the Express, where we are Board members; so, one still plays a guidance role,” he once said.

    On why he keeps muting business ideas even while neck-deep in his busy schedule as a media manager, Igwe said he got his kicks from looking at the many system failures that characterise the Nigerian polity.

    “We (Mike and I) have also decided to develop a niche that had always been part of us. When we go abroad and talk to some of our other colleagues in the media, the things we describe are completely strange to them. They cannot imagine that you could do a business and then you would still buy a generator, drill your own borehole or even contribute to rehabilitating roads. So, this absence of infrastructure is absent out there. They have taken all that for granted. So, if you are a manager in Nigeria and you succeed, then, you can excel anywhere in the world.”

    Aside journalism, Igwe, before his death and expectedly, alongside Awoyinfa, established his mastery of another form of writing. Together, the duo is unarguably the most renowned biographer in the country today. While they were still in various paid employment and after they decided to be on their own, the duo wrote the biographies of more Nigerians than anybody else has ever done.

    “We have always done this simultaneously with journalism, which is writing books. And you know that this niche actually started 15 years ago when we wrote a book called 50 Nigeria’s Corporate Strategists. The irony is that I can’t even find a copy of this book now because it was stolen. We have printed three editions of it and they all sold out. It is a book that profiles 50 corporate leaders, trying to distil their management experiences and trying to work out case studies of how businesses are managed in our very peculiar terrain,” the late Journalist said of their exploit as biographers.

    A man of many parts while still living, Igwe truthfully and of course correctly, described himself as a complicated person. According to him, being a Pastor and at the same time a businessman, he comes across to different people in different ways.

    “It is a bit complicated because as you know, I am a pastor of a church. And as a pastor of a church, it depends on the activities of the day. I wake up, relax and set my agenda. After my prayers, exercise, break-fast and all that, I head for my study to work. One of the ironies is that I have three offices and I am about to have one more. I have an office at home, there is another one at the Express, while I also have an office in the church; and as a matter of fact, Corporate Biographies, which is our publishing company, is also making an office for me.”

    A consummate journalist till he breathed his last, the erudite media manager was never tired of propagating the many powers of the average journalist. To him, there was hardly any other profession as endowed with power and authority to positively impact on their society.

    “Journalists have residual advantages. What are these residual advantages? They have exposure and access (to information) and they are always operating in the written word every day of their lives. However, a journalist has to beware of the tempting attraction of routine.”

    One other thing Igwe would be remembered for was his detribalised nature. He never wanted to know where the reporter or Editor is from. The person, not the background, was his interest. And he carried this nature right into all his other human relationships.

    “For me, it’s a question of synergy of ideas. If you find somebody that your ideas flow with, it’s easier to work with that person.  I don’t look at people in terms of where they come from, but I look at their hearts. If the heart of a man is good, whether he’s Hausa, Yoruba or Igbo is irrelevant to me. Personally, I have always been positively affected by the people outside my tribe than the people from my tribe. I’m a detribalised Nigerian. I look at human beings in terms of their quality.”

    With the death of Igwe, the Nigeria media industry has lost another firebrand professional, a type that is not easy to replace.

    Igwe’s death, my saddest day- Kalu

    The publisher and chairman of The Sun Group of Newspapers and New Telegraph, Dr. Orji Kalu, has described the death of the vice-chairman of the media conglomerate, Mr. Dimgba Igwe, yesterday, as the saddest day of his life.

    In a statement by his media adviser, Mr. Ebere Wabara, Kalu, who is in London, said in a telephone conversation, that he was devastated by Igwe’s death. He declared: “Igwe, apart from being my kinsman, was one of the founding pillars in the establishment of The Sun. He worked tirelessly with others to ensure the instant success story associated with our tabloid today. I will surely miss his professional advice, camaraderie and brotherliness,” Kalu said.

    Kalu enjoined God to strengthen his family and associates to bear this irreparable loss, pointing out that “journalism has just lost one of its brightest minds respected for analytical writings right from his National Concord days. This is indeed my saddest day,” Kalu declared.

    On why he keeps muting business ideas even while neck-deep in his busy schedule as a media manager, Igwe said he got his kicks from looking at the many system failures that characterise the Nigerian polity.

    “We (Mike and I) have also decided to develop a niche that had always been part of us. When we go abroad and talk to some of our other colleagues in the media, the things we describe are completely strange to them. They cannot imagine that you could do a business and then you would still buy a generator, drill your own borehole or even contribute to rehabilitating roads. So, this absence of infrastructure is absent out there. They have taken all that for granted. So, if you are a manager in Nigeria and you succeed, then, you can excel anywhere in the world.”

    Aside journalism, Igwe, before his death and expectedly, alongside Awoyinfa, established his mastery of another form of writing. Together, the duo is unarguably the most renowned biographer in the country today. While they were still in various paid employment and after they decided to be on their own, the duo wrote the biographies of more Nigerians than anybody else has ever done.

    “We have always done this simultaneously with journalism, which is writing books. And you know that this niche actually started 15 years ago when we wrote a book called 50 Nigeria’s Corporate Strategists.

    He was shining star of Nigerian journalism, says APC

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) said yesterday that with the death of Pastor Dimgba Igwe, Nigerian journalism has lost a shining star.

    The party, in a statement in Lagos by its National Publicity Secretary, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, expressed “shock and sadness at the sudden death of such a vibrant, cerebral and wonderful person, who has been a constant star in the constellation of Nigerian journalism for decades, without compromising his personal and professional integrity.”

    It condoled with the family and friends of the late Pastor Igwe, and prayed that God will give them the strength to bear their loss.

    APC asked the police to find and bring to justice the driver of the vehicle that knocked him down while jogging around his residence.

    ‘’Words are not enough to describe the huge loss, to his family, friends, profession and indeed our entire nation, that Igwe’s death represents. But we are sure the achievements he recorded in his lifetime will forever be a source of pride – and indeed a soothing balm – to all,” the party said and prayed for the repose of his soul.

  • Alampasu to sign Genk deal Sunday

    Alampasu to sign Genk deal Sunday

    Nigeria U20 goalkeeper Dele Alampasu is set to sign a pre-contract with Belgian club Racing Genk on Sunday.

    A top source close to the former Nigeria U-17 shot stopper informed AfricanFootball.com that he is waiting for his agent to join him in Belgium for his contract negotiations to be finalised.

    He is expected to sign a professional contract when he turns 18 on Christmas eve.

    Alampasu, who was on the final squad to the 2014 CHAN in South Africa, first tried out with Genk before a freak training ground accident cut short his stint with the club as he suffered a knee injury that required surgery.

    The player’s agent Sunday Orelaga has always maintained that Genk are keen to sign the tall goalkeeper even though the club’s management has been overhauled.

  • Search for moon on Sunday, says Oloyede

    Search for moon on Sunday, says Oloyede

    Secretary-General of the Nigerian Supreme Council for Islamic Affairs, NSCIA, Prof Ishaq Oloyede has urged Muslims all over Nigeria to look for the new crescent of Shawwal on Sunday.

    Oloyede said members of the National Moon Sighting Committee have been deployed with appropriate gadgets to various parts of the country for easy sighting of the moon.

    “It is an indisputable fact that the old (Ramadan) moon will set just before sunset in Nigeria on Saturday, 26. The new astronomic moon would be born few minutes before midnight of that Saturday. Consequently, the search for Shawwal moon is on Sunday 27th. It can be sighted in Nigeria on Sunday with optical instruments or with some difficulties with naked eyes. Any claim of sighting a moon that is yet to be born is not only false, mistaken or impossible but also ridiculous,” he said.

    He continued: “It is in this respect that the NSCIA wishes to remind all Muslims who know, and notify those who do not, that there is an established structure for moon-sighting in Nigeria. Due to its significance and technicalities, the Council has a National Moonsighting Committee under the leadership of an expert. The Committee is equipped with necessary equipment and technological gadgets that are relevant to the discharge of its assignment. The membership of the Committee is drawn from various segments of the Nigerian Muslim Ummah, including:

    “However, membership of the Committee is not exclusive to the above-listed personalities. The NSCIA expects people with requisite technical and demonstrable knowledge of moon-sighting to indicate their interests to the Secretary General, NSCIA.  It is also helpful for such persons to list their areas of expertise. We intend to have an expert in each of the Senatorial Zone of the Country.

    “The National Moonsighting Committee will advise the President-General of the NSCIA (The Sultan) through the Secretary-General, on the commencement and conclusion of Ramadan or sighting of Ramadan and Shawwal crescents.

    “When a Muslim sights a new moon, he should call any member of the Committee close to him, who will ask him series pertinent questions. These may include time the moon was sighted, position of the crescent relative to where the Sun sets, altitude of the crescent above the horizon and condition of the sky at the time of the sighting.”

    Oloyede urged Nigerian Muslims to direct their observations, notices and enquiries on the crescent to members of the National Moonsighting Committee.

    “It is on the backdrop of the foregoing that the NSCIA announces that in line with the Qur’anic verse and the tradition of the Prophet, as Ramadan draws to its close, any information on sighting the crescent (of Shawwal) should be conveyed to the National Moonsighting Committee so that the President-General of the NSCIA, the Sultan of Sokoto, Alhaji Muhammad Sa’ad Abubakar may pronounce the end of fasting,” he said.

  • LMC: Second stanza starts Sunday with fixture adjustments

    LMC: Second stanza starts Sunday with fixture adjustments

    Match Day 20 fixtures of the Glo Premier League scheduled for Sunday, July 20 will hold as scheduled except for fixtures involving Premier League clubs involved in the Federation Cup Round of 16 games that comes up today, July 17 and those that may qualify for the quarter finals which will hold next Wednesday.

    Enyimba International, Nembe City, Giwa FC, Bayelsa United and El-Kanemi Warriors are among the ten Premier League Clubs in action in the Round of 16. The others are Sharks, Dolphins, Crown FC, Nasarawa United and Lobi Stars.

    Chief Operating Officer (COO)of the League Management Company (LMC), Salihu Abubakar announced the slight adjustment in fixtures which he attributed to the changes in the already listed Federation Cup Match Days.

    “Sequel to the change in Federation Cup Match Days, we have been constrained to also slightly adjust our fixtures to accommodate Premier League teams involved in the Federation Cup Round of 16 and quarter finals games.

    “Matches in Jalingo between FC Taraba and Gombe United and that in Warri between Warri Wolves and Kaduna United will hold as scheduled on Sunday while on Wednesday, July 23, the other fixtures will be played but excluding those clubs that qualify for the Federations Cup quarter finals”, Abubakar added.

  • Police deploy 400 in Liberia, Sudan

    The Nigeria Police yesterday contributed additional 400 officers and men to peace-keeping operations in Liberia and the Sudan.

    The police officers and men are part of the nation’s contribution to the United Nations (UN) Mission in Liberia (UNMIL) and the African Union – United Nations’ Hybrid Operation in Dafur, Sudan (UNAMID).

    During the pre-deployment and competence demonstration in Abuja yesterday, Inspector-General of Police (IGP) Mohammed Abubakar said the police contingents were on similar missions in a number of countries.

    According to him, Nigerian policemen and officers are in Cote D’Ivoire, Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), Guinea Bissau, Haiti, Liberia, Sierra-Leone, Somalia, South Sudan and Sudan.

    Abubakar assured the contingents that the police authorities had made adequate provision for their welfare, material and logistics support.

    He advised them to be good ambassadors of the Nigeria Police Force and the country.

    The highpoint of the occasion was the tactical demonstration by members of the contingents on operational skills and tactics on crowd/riot control and other ancillary policing strategies in line with UN standards.

  • Gov. Orji to host Enyimba on Sunday

    Gov. Orji to host Enyimba on Sunday

    Abia State governor, Dr Theodore Ahamefule Orji, will on Sunday, host Enyimba International Football Club of Aba at the Government House, Umuahia.

    The Abia State chief executive is hosting the two-time African champions in appreciation of the gallant efforts put up by the state-owned football club during the just-concluded league season, where the state-financed team placed second, having garnered 62 points, just a point shy of Kano Pillars’ 63, thereby securing one of the two slots to represent the country at the lucrative CAF Champions League next year.

    Enyimba had earlier on September 15, 2013 won the glamorous Federation Cup for the third time in the presence of Governor Orji, who was on hand to cheer the team to victory at the Teslim Balogun Stadium in Surulere Lagos during the Federation Cup Final between the Aba-based club and Warri Wolves Football Club of Warri.

    Enyimba achieved this feat despite losing the state’s FA Cup trophy to Abia Warriors of Umuahia for the first time in 13 years, which, as a matter of fact, was the tonic that the Aba Millionaires needed to wake up from their slumber both in the league and the Federation Cup. It was after losing the state FA Cup that the management of the team, after extensive soul searching, decided to wield the big stick that made both the players and the technical crew to sit up.

     

     

     

     

    It is recalled that Enyimba at the end of the first stanza of the league,

    was placed 14th on the log, but due to the decision of the management of

    team led by Chief Felix Anyansi Agwu to apply the necessary measures,

    Enyimba clawed back to position of reckoning which saw the team

     

    winning the

    Federation Cup and placing second at the end of the season. What

     

    Enyimba

    achieved last season was no mean feat when one considers where Aba

     

    based

    club was coming from.

    It is in recognition of all these that the state governor will be rolling

    the drums for Enyimba on Sunday. And who says Enyimba does not

     

    deserve such

    appreciation for what it has achieved at the just concluded league

     

    season?