Tag: the nation

  • Certificate of return: Court fixes judgment for Friday in Okorocha’s suit against INEC

    A Federal High Court in Abuja has fixed judgment for Friday (June 7) for judgment in the suit by former Imo State Governor, Rochas Okorocha, in which he seeks to compel the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to issue him a certificate of return.

    Justice Okon Abang chose the date for judgment after entertain final arguments from lawyers representing parties in the case, including Kehinde Ogunwumiju (SAN) for the plaintiff.

    READ ALSO: Imo Assembly mandates Ihedioha to probe Okorocha

    Okorocha is, by the suit marked FHC/ABJ/CS/296/2019, praying the court to, among others, order INEC to issue him a certificate of return as the senator-elect for Imo West Senatorial District.

    It is part of Okorcha’s contention that INEC lacked the statutory powers to withhold his certificate of return, because he was validly elected to occupy the senatorial seat.

    He equally wants the court to declare that INEC acted in error when it refused to recognise him as the winner of the senatorial election in Imo West District, even after the Returning Officer had declared that he won the election.

  • Anambra most wanted criminal suspect remanded

    Most wanted criminal suspect in Anambra state, Ikechukwu Udensi (alias IKANDA), has been remanded in Onitsha prison till Thursday, May 30.

    This followed his arraignment on Friday before Chief Magistrate, Chioma Amuche of Magistrate Court Two Onitsha over his involvement in the murder of an Onitsha-based businessman late Ndubuisi Nwokolo.

    The suspect was accused of committing the crime on June 2018 in accomplice with five others at large including Tochukwu Aneke, Eze Okwuchukwu and Ebuka Udensi.

    Counsel to the complainant, Chief Barr Charles Okafor, lauded the Nigerian Police Force for the arrest as well as ensuring his prosecution for murder case.

    He said: “We are looking upon the judiciary to deliver justice in this case. The Magistrate Court Onitsha has no jurisdiction to try the case presided over by Magistrate Chioma Amuche.

    “The only thing she has power to do is to remand the accused person; after which we are coming back on 30th May 2019 for compliance.

    “The compliance is to ensure that the case file is forwarded to Director of Public Prosecution (DPP) for which the case would be referred to Onitsha High Court which has powers and jurisdiction to entertain murder cases.”

    Chairman of Ogalonye Bright Street Line, Main Market Onitsha, Mr. Francis Maduka, demanded justice to put an end to this kind of atrocity in the state.

    He said: “Every right thinking person in Anambra state understood that IKANDA was declared wanted for many killing atrocities he has committed in Onitsha.

    Read Also: NEPAD trains 500 Anambra youths

    “Although he has those backing him up, he takes the state as though it was his personal property; that’s why he killed the deceased.”

    Present at the court were the mother, father and wife of the deceased (Ndubuisi Nwokolo), former chairman, Onitsha Market Amalgamated Traders Association (OMATA), Chief Godwin Okeke.

    There were protesters outside the courtroom, demanding fierce justice against IKANDA who allegedly killed one of their own.

  • The Nation is Newspaper of The Year

    The Nation” is the best newspaper in the land. And it is official.

    This newspaper last night won the star prize, the Babatunde Jose Prize for the Newspaper of the Year at the Nigeria Media Merit Award (NMMA) 2018.

    “Nigeria’s widest circulating newspaper”, beat “The Punch” and “The Guardian” to clinch the award.

    It won five NMMA in Power Reporting, Capital Market Reporting, Money Market Reporting, Innovative Reporting and  Newspaper of the Year.

    This newspaper was runner-up in 16 categories, namely: Power Reporter of the Year, Agriculture Reporter of the Year, Culture and Tradition Reporter of the Year, Gani Fawehinmi prize for Human Rights Reporter of the Year, Foreign Reporter of the Year, Defence Reporter of the Year, Tourism Reporter of the Year, News Photographer of the Year, Banking and Finance Reporter of the Year, Oil and Gas Reporter of the Year, Most Innovative Reporter of the Year, Investigative Reporter of the Year, Newspaper Reporter of The Year and Editor of the Year.

    Chukwuemeka Ugwuanyi opened the door of awards  with his entry “Power headache: will it ever get the right pill?”

    The entry won the Peter Odili prize for Power Reporter of the Year, beating The Nation’s Taiwo Adebulu and The Punch’s Toluwani Eniola.

    Multiple award winner Collins Nweze followed with the Access Bank Prize for Capital Market Reporter of the Year.

    Nweze’s two entries: “Sukuk bonds…grassroots investors golden chance” and “Small businesses groan as T-Bills, bonds grab attention” were winner and first runner-up respectively. Both entries trumped New Telegraph’s Ugwu Christopher Ndubuisi’s.

    Collins also shone in the UBA Prize for money market Reporter of the Year category with two entries. They are: “AMCON: restorer of businesses (1)” and “Taxation: Endless games…Endless controversies”.

    New Telegraph’s Ugwu was third best in the category.

    Duru Ekene Innocent received the baton and coasted home with another award with two entries in the 9 Mobile Prize Most Innovative Reporter of the Year.

    Innocent’s entries that dusted Gabriel Sunkanmi Olawale of Vanguard’s are: “Paedophiles on the prowl” and “We’ll rather perish in the desert”.

    New Telegraph newspaper won 12 awards, The Punch won five awards, NigerianTribune won two awards, while Vanguard and BusinessDay won one award each.

    Television Continental (TVC) beat rivals Channels Television to win the Television Station of the Year.

    The Nation’s runners-up in 16 categories were: Taiwo Adelabu in the Power Reporter of the Year category won by Ugwuanyi.

    Oyesina Fadare was first and second runner-up in the Bukola Saraki prize for Agriculture Reporter of the Year.

    The category was won by New Telegraph’s Omoniyi Oluwatosin with an entry titled: “Women of calloused hands, financial power.”

    Oladesu E Olaniran’s entry in the Olagunsoye Oyinlola Prize for Culture and Tradition Reporter of the Year, was beaten by New Telegraph’s “Tribal Marks: Our identity, our pride.”

    Wale Ajetunmobi and Olatunji Ololade were neck and neck in the Gani Fawehinmi prize for Human Rights Reporter of the Year, a category won by Mojeed Alabi of New Telegraph.

    His entry was “El-zakzaky: Hurting memories of a massacre.”

    Ajetunmobi was also runner-up in the Foreign Reporter of the Year category won by New Telegraph’s Ogunbanke Temitope.

    Ololade also gave the Defence Reporter of the Year a shot, but was runner-up to New Telegraph’s Juliana Francis whose entry ‘Why I stood naked at naval gate’ clinched the prize. Isioma Madike also of New Telegraph was second runner-up.

    Okorie Uguru left Saturday Sun’s Musa Jubril in Second runner up place, but lost the Tourism Reporter of the Year Award to Nigerian Tribune’s Newton-Ray Ukwuoma.

    Ukwuoma’s entry was ‘Badagry: Descendants of foremost slave merchant now lives in cells he built for slaves’.

    Last year’s winner Abiodun Williams of The Nation lost his crown to The Punch’s Obasa Olatunji Dave in the News Photographer of the Year category.

    Aside winning the Capital Market and Money Market Reporters of the Year Prizes, Nweze was also first runner up in both categories.

    He was also runner-up in the Banking and Finance Reporter of the Year category.

    Ugwuanyi’s entry in the Oil and Gas Reporter of the Year category was bested by Vanguard’s Emman Ovuakporie, while Innocent Duru was also runner up in the Most Innovative Reporter of the Year category that he won.

    Dorcas Egede gave a tough fight but finished second in the Investigative Reporter of the Year category won by Punch’s Folarin Samson.

    Star Judicial correspondent Joseph Jibueze was unlucky this time round, losing out in the Newspaper Reporter of The Year category to Telegraph’s Isioma Madike.

    The Nation Editor, Gbenga Omotoso bested Vanguard’s Eze Anaba but lost the Editor of the Year prize to The Punch’s Martin Ayankola.

    In the print category, New Telegraph newspaper won 12 awards, The Nation and The Punch tied at five awards, Nigerian Tribune won two awards, while Vanguard and BusinessDay, which was the only nominee in its category, won one award each.

    In the Radio category, FRCN won Radio Reporter and Presenter of the Year. Ray Power won the Radio Broadcaster of the Year.

    Lagos Traffic Radio 96.1 won Radio Programme of the Year, while Radio Nigeria won the Radio Station of the Year.

    LTV 8 clinched the prize for Television Reporter of the Year.

    Channels TV was named the TV Newscaster of the Year.

    Television Drama of the Year prize went to Silverbird’s Liberty Villa, while TV Continental won TV Station of the Year.

  • The Nation celebrates goodness of God at thanksgiving service

    WORKERS at Vintage Press Limited, publishers of The Nation titles, yesterday held their yearly thanksgiving service at the company’s Lagos Headquarters.

    The service afforded them the opportunity to celebrate the goodness and mercies of God in the last 12 months.

    An Assistant Pastor with The Redeemed Christian Church of God (RCCG), Region 11, Pastor Remi Oluboba, was the guest minister.

    In his sermon, taken from 2 Corinthians 3:18, the cleric urged the workers to thank God for protection. He reminded them that despite the challenges along the line, God has been merciful throughout the journey and should therefore celebrate the victory.

    He said everyone has a reason to be thankful in every circumstance.

    Pastor Oluboba, who titled his message as: “To be more glorious”, said it was necessary for all Christians to avoid running after material wealth and be more dedicated to the service of God.

    Read also: Man, 21, in court for stealing beer, juice

    He stressed that it was Christ-like to seek to honour God than to pursue worldly achievements that will not lead to eternal life.

    The cleric urged the workers to choose to love and serve God, adding that doing so provides the Holy Ghost the chance to guide and counsel one through life.

    He led a prayer session for the directors, management and members of staff.

    General Manager in charge of Training & Development Soji Omotunde explained the reason for the thanksgiving service.

    He said it was organised to show appreciation to God for what he described as a successful business year.

    Omotunde said it was also to thank God for His abundant mercies, grace and favour throughout the year.

    Chief Internal Auditor Sunday Adeleke described the service as an important event on the newspaper’s calendar, noting that the management holds the belief that its successes are not hinged only on the strengths or initiatives of its personnel but also on the divine favour of God.

    At the service were Editor, Daily Gbenga Omotoso; Editorial Board Chairman Sam Omatseye; his deputy Tunji Adegboyega; Editorial Page Editor Sanya Oni; Editor, Sunday Festus Eriye; and staff members.

  • The Nation sets record at DAME

    With two prizes and an awards record, The Nation had a good outing on Saturday at the 27th Diamond Awards for Media Excellence (DAME) in Lagos.

    Serial award-winning Associate Editor Olatunji Ololade clinched the Nestle Nigeria Plc Prize for Nutrition Reporting, becoming the first awardee to win a DAME prize eight times and in five categories.

    Ololade’s three-part entry in the Nutrition Reporting category, titled “Dangerous meat, toxic water (1)”, “Dangerous meat, toxic water (2)” and “Deadly meat in abattoirs (3)”, was published on August 12, 2017 and August 19, 2017.

    Other nominees in the Nutrition Reporting category are The Nation’s Medinat Olere Kanabe and New Telegraph’s Appolonia Adeyemi.

    Kanabe’s entry, “Weight loss could be harmful”, published on December 10, 2017, earned her a second runner-up place behind Adeyemi.

    Multiple award winner and Senior Judicial Correspondent Joseph Jibueze increased his DAME prizes haul to five by winning the Judicial Reporting category.

    Jibueze’s entry, titled: “Frustrated litigants groan over endless appeals”, was published on December 29, 2017.

    Punch’s Oladimeji Ramon and The Nation’s Senior Judicial Correspondent Eric Ikhilae were first and second runners up in the Judicial Reporting category won by Jibueze.

    This newspaper also got nominations in other categories, including Agriculture Reporting in which The Nation’s multiple-award winning Assistant Editor Sina Fadare was first runner-up.

    The Nation Editor Gbenga Omotoso was the first runner-up in Informed Commentary. Political Editor Emmanuel Oladesu was runner-up.

    Omotoso was also the first runner up in Editor of the Year category.

    The Nation also came as first runner-up in the Newspaper of the Year category.

    The paper won or was runner-up in nine out of 15 categories.

    Emeritus professor of mass communication and veteran columnist Prof. Olatunji Dare and former editor in chief of Newswatch magazine, Raymond Ekpu, were named Lifetime Achievement awardees.

    Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of Diamond Publications Limited Mr. Lanre Idowu, described all the nominees as winners, saying the objective of the award was to deepen the culture of professionalism in Nigerian journalism.

    Idowu urged the media not to “join the purveyors of fake news” and challenged journalists to promote factual unbiased reporting in the build-up to the 2019 polls.

    “In this season of political campaigns, the media needs to be more even-handed in their assessment of political actors and their messages. They need to identify the issues early and seek clear answers from the candidates,” he said.

    The Punch won the Best Designed Newspaper.

    The prize for Editorial Cartooning went to Daily Trust’s Mustapha Bulama for his September 2, 2017 entry “Hate Speech”.

    The Punch’s Saheed Olugbon won the News Photography category with his “Traders at Ojuwoye Market” published on July 3, 2017.

    “The Punch” came first in the Agriculture Reporting category with Kunle Falayi’s September 9, 2017 entry titled: “Rice farmers bemoan fate as 38 million hectares of land waste away”.

    Samson Folarin of The Punch won the prize in the Lagos Reporting category. His entry, “VIS men accused of burning impounded car in Lagos”, was published on March 23, 24, 29, 30, April 3, and November 20, 2017.

    The paper won in the Sports Reporting category with Eric Dumo’s “Gold in the midst of clay: Remarkable stories of female athletes shaming disabilities, published on April 1, 2017.

    Eniola Akinkuotu of The Punch won the Child Friendly reporting category. His story, “How stigma, government policies cause 60,000 HIV deaths annually, was published on December 27, 2017.

    Tribune clinched the Editorial Writing prize with an entry titled: “Being candid on Buhari’s absence”, published on February 17, 2017.

    Lekan Sote’s “Towards making Nigeria a nation”, published on June 7, 2017 in “The Punch”, beat Omotoso’s “Atiku visits Obasanjo” and Oladesu’s “The journey to nationhood” to second and third runner up.

    The International Center for Investigative Reporting (ICIR) was the winner in the Investigative Reporting category.

    Its entry was titled “Ghost hospitals, expired drugs, leaking roofs, waterlogged drug stores…the multi-million naira health centres in the Southeast are in tatters”.

    The Punch, with nine awards, won the Newspaper of the Year and its Editor Martin Ayankola Editor of the Year.

  • It’s time to reshape the way we think about health issues

    Imagine a world where Alexander Fleming’s discovery of penicillin 90 years ago remained unknown to most of the planet. Millions of lives would have been needlessly lost.

    Sharing knowledge of the many different and innovative ways to solve major health issues can have immeasurable benefit.

    Over the next three weeks, Sparknews is proud to invite five leading newspapers from five different countries (Der Spiegel, El Pais, The Sunday Times, The Nation & The Hindu) to explore stories of solutions that are having an impact on today’s most pressing healthcare challenges.

    These challenges have evolved since Fleming’s time. We have made important progress against infectious diseases, but studies reveal that our way of life has become an even greater threat to our health.

    Stress, junk food, substance abuse, pollution and endocrine disrupting chemicals have paved the way for the growth of noncommunicable diseases such as cancer, cardiovascular disease, respiratory disease and diabetes.

    Noncommunicable diseases are now responsible for more than 70 percent of deaths globally, mostly among lower income communities.

    The same way of life that’s impoverishing our physical condition is prompting a decline in our state of mind.

    According to the World Health Organization, suicide is the second leading cause of death among 15-29-year olds, and death due to dementia more than doubled between 2000 and 2016.

    The stigma surrounding mental illness and treatment renders this issue even more complex.

    Considerations such as age, gender, sexual orientation and migration status tend to exclude certain populations from the healthcare system, leaving them vulnerable to various types of disease and psychological distress.

    As the articles published in The Nation show, there is reason for hope. Even if medical research has traditionally focused more on curing disease than preventing it, we’re at the dawn of a more open-minded approach to medicine and health.

    Researchers, scientists, individuals and organizations all over the world are working on new ways to prevent noncommunicable diseases, to provide universal access to healthcare, and to address and destigmatize mental illness.

    The medical community and the general public are increasingly embracing alternative approaches to prevent what’s preventable and live our fullest possible lives with what’s not.

    For example, telemedicine services can address overcrowded hospitals, while providing healthcare access to people in remote locations. Affordable nasal filters could prevent pulmonary disease linked to air pollution.

    Training refugees to provide psychological counseling to their peers might help the latter to overcome traumatic events.

    Solutions such as these have the potential to save lives and reshape the way we think about healthcare. They can offer us better, longer, healthier lives, no matter our differences or socio-economic status.

    You can be a part of the solution – reading and sharing these stories so that they reach every corner of the globe.

    Let’s rethink health together.

  • Thanksgiving as The Nation clocks 12

    VINTAGE Press Ltd, publishers of The Nation, marked its 12th anniversary yesterday with a thanksgiving service at its headquarters in Lagos.

    The service was preceded by praise and worship songs by members of the staff, including the Managing Director, Mr. Victor Ifijeh; Executive Director Finance/Admin, Mr. Ade Odunewu; Editor,  Gbenga Omotoso; Sunday Editor Festus Eriye; Editor (Online) Lekan Otufodunrin and Admin Manager/Legal Adviser, Mrs. Folake Adeoye, among others.

    In his sermon titled: “To be made whole”, taken from the Book of Luke 17:11-17, the guest preacher, Assistant Pastor-in-charge of Province 17 (Admin), the Redeemed Christian Church of God (RCCG), Lagos,  Pastor John Ajiboye, praised The Nation for marking its anniversary in the presence of God and prayed for a bright future for the paper.

    “If you have faith in God, your position in the community of newspapers will change for good,” he said.

    The cleric urged the organisation to always put God first in all it does.  He said doing so would bring success beyond expectation.

    To Pastor Ajiboye, wholeness is usually evident. He said for those made whole, sorrow suddenly turns into joy and positions change for good.

    “When you are made whole, your position changes.  When you are in the right position, your position becomes incomprehensible.  When you are made whole, you go beyond the reach of poverty.  Once you are made whole, your classroom of prayer request will become a source of thanksgiving.  You will forget all your past defeat and failure,” he said.

    However, to be made whole, Pastor Ajiboye said, the workers must align with God and have absolute faith in Him.

    The session was concluded with prayers for the company’s continued success.

    The first edition of The Nation was published on Monday, July 31, 2006.

  • Echoes from The Nation Agric, food Summit

    Beyond the debate at the recent The Nation’s First Summit on Agriculture and Food Security, Assistant Editor NDUKA CHIEJINA revisits the issues thrown up at the event.

    BESIDES widening the tax net and eliminating leakages in the revenue accruing to it, the Federal Government is banking on the non-oil sector to diversify the economy.

    Prior to the introduction of diversification policy by the President Muhammadu Buhari administration, the Federal Government was running a mono economy, earning more than 80 per cent of its revenue from crude oil exportation. But things are changing. The government is looking the way of solid minerals and agriculture.

    The summit on Agriculture and Food Security organised by Vintage Press publishers of The Nation was to agriculture on the front burner and stimulate national discourse on the sector as an alternative to oil, the mainstay of Nigeria’s economy.

    The consensus at the summit, which drew players from the public and private sectors of the economy, was a call on the federal and state governments to pump more cash into agriculture.

    Participants at the summit displayed their products during the video exhibition session. The participants included: some state’s chief executive officers, heads of government agencies and private sector players.

    They are: governors Akinwunmi Ambode (Lagos), Kashim Shettima (Borno); Ibikunle Amosun (Ogun); Seriake Dickson (Bayelsa); Sani Bello (Niger); Simon Lalong (Plateau); Godwin Obaseki (Edo); Samuel Ortom (Benue); Tanko Al-Makura (Nasarawa); Willie Obiano (Anambra); Atiku Bagudu (Kebbi) and Aminu Tambuwal (Sokoto).

    Others are: Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC) Managing Director Nsima Ekere; Agriculture Minister Audu Ogbeh; Bank of Agriculture Managing Director Kabiru Adamu; Dangote Grouo President Aliko Dangote and Olam Group Managing Director Venkataramani Srivathsan.

    According to the governors, the development of the agricultural sector would not only save the country capital flight, but fast-track the diversification policy and guarantee food security.

    In his opening remarks, Vintage Press Limited’s Managing Director Victor Ifijeh explained the summit’s objective. It was to ensure that government at all levels and Nigerians in general, participate in agriculture to ensure food security, Ifijeh noted.

    According to him, the organisation offered the platform of the summit for a cross-fertilisation of ideas to enhance the production of food so that the country can become not only self-sufficient in food production but reverse the food importation trend.

    Reminding Nigerians of experts’ consistent verdict that “a country that cannot feed itself is at great risk”, Ifijeh said: “The essence of the summit is to ensure that the country is not at risk in terms of food. Nigeria must be able to feed itself.”

    In their submissions at the summit, promoters of state-sponsored agriculture, governors Abubakar Bagudu (Kebbi), Kashim Shettima (Borno) Simon Lalong (Plateau), insisted that the country has not given sufficient funds for the development of agriculture.

    They argued that this was evident in the banks’ toxic loans inherited to the Asset Management Company of Nigeria (AMCON).

    Bagudu said: “When the Asset Management Company of Nigeria (AMCON) took over from the banking system, of the over N4 trillion debt it inherited, only less than a billion was owed by the agriculture sector.

    “We have not been putting money into agriculture. Let’s start from there. When AMCON was created in 2010, it took over from the banking system about N4 trillion worth of bad loans but less than a billion naira was related to agriculture out of it,” the governor lamented.

    He said that the Anchor Borrower Programme (ABP) that lends money to the agricultural sector for specific crops had, as at the last count, given about N54 billion to develop the sector. The figure, he said was less than $200 million.

    In comparison, Bagudu said that the Federal Government has invested about $9 billion for oil production, thus exposing the gap in the funding for agricultural development.

    He went on: “There is no state, including the oil producing ones, that does not have about three crops, which with the right investments, cannot produce food for Nigeria including the states bordered by large bodies of water from which fish can be harvested in large commercial quantities.”

    He insisted that inadequate funding is the number one factor that is missing from the development of the sector.

    Citing the Brazilian example, Bagudu said that “a country that produces the same volume of oil as Nigeria is leading global production of maize, sugar, soya beans and other commodities.”

    He believed that the efficient funding of the agriculture sector its attendant value chain would bring about maximum benefits that will surpass oil.

    “We have a very dynamic, entrepreneurial and hardworking populace and they are ready to work. There are opportunities. We have to mobilize them,” he said.

    Also speaking, Shettima said: “A country that is not independent of its food needs cannot be said to be truly independent.”

    He lauded the Buhari administration for creating an enabling environment for thriving entrepreneurial agriculture.

    Entrepreneurial agriculture, he explained, provides jobs and opportunities for people so it deserves to enjoy government’s intervention like other sectors such as aviation and power.

    Going forward, Shettima urged the government to embrace change and modernity to improve output and coalesce for a common purse.

    Lamenting that Nigeria has become a dumping ground for all kinds of garbage, the Borno helmsman said: “Kebbi and Sokoto states can meet the cereal needs of the nation. Benue to Taraba he said can meet up with the tuber needs of the nation, while the coastal states can meet our protein needs, especially fish.”

    Shettima, who described Nigeria as a rainbow nation, insisted “that the hope of the black man lies with Nigeria and the future of Nigeria is bright.”

    Lalong said that he and his team attended the summit to demonstrate the significance the Plateau State government attaches to agriculture.

    He declared that the days of oil were gradually becoming history, adding that there was no doubt that President Buhari has laid the foundation for increased agricultural production in the country.

    The Plateau governor insisted that the country must diversify, especially “when nobody is talking about petrol any longer.

    He restated his administration’s determination to improve the fortunes of the Northcentral state through agriculture.

    The high point of the summit was the lecture presented by Prof. Adebiyi Daramola, a one-time Federal University of Agriculture Akure (FUNAB) and World Bank consultant. The lecture touched on the sensitive topic of ranching.

    The professor said: “Ranching is the way to curb the incessant herdsmen and farmer’s crises in the country.”

    “Ranching is more profitable and leads to the production of healthier livestock with greater returns on investment from increased milk and meat production and the accompanying benefits of ranching which are not possible with the nomadic or pastoral cattle rearing.”

    In the lecture entitled: “Sustainability of growth and the future of agriculture in Nigeria”, Daramola said that small holder farmers should be encouraged to transform from their subsistence level to agroprenuers.

    His argument elicited strong contributions from the audience some of whom argued that the government was not doing enough to encourage agroprenuers, especially with funds at low interest rates for agriculture value chains.

    Prof. Daramola noted that the old practice of farming with hoes and cutlasses was no longer fashionable to young graduates.

    To make agriculture attractive to young graduates, he advocated new approach that would encourage less-tasking and technology-driven agriculture methods driven by the private sector with demonstrable evidence of profit.

    According to him, “subsistence farming is recipe of poverty”, explaining that a farmer that consumes about 70 per cent of his produce is a subsistent one but going forward, “young graduates can only go into agriculture if they are convinced that the methods and are attendant benefits are in lock-step with their desires as graduates.

    The state-sponsored intervention agencies like the Nigeria Incentive-Based Risk Sharing for Agricultural Lending (NIRSAL), Bank of Industry (BoI), the department at Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) that is in charge of the Anchor Borrowers Programme (ABP) and NEXIM bank, institutions with a track record of funding, mixed the opportunity of the summit. They were absent.

    It is believed that their contributions would have enhanced and enriched the debate at the summit and allowed the audience to leverage on their interventions and encouraged more individuals and firms to buy into the much-talked about agroprenuers initiative.

     

  • The Nation’s Omatseye gets students’ award

    The Nation Editorial Board Chairman Sam Omatseye yesterday received this year’s Nigerian Students’ Favourite Journalist (NISFAJ) award as the best columnist and writer in Nigeria.

    He received the award in his office at The Nation headquarters in Lagos.

    President of the National Union of Campus Journalists in Nigeria, Joshua Oloyede, said the award was for Omatseye’s progressive contribution to the development of journalistic products among campus journalists.

    He said: “We really appreciate his fatherly contribution because we believe what he has been doing is a means of contributing his quota to the development of potential writers in the country.”

    Oloyede said the celebrated columnist had sanitised the country by producing journalism of justice and peace.

    He added: “In the spirit of unity, wellness, appreciation and gratitude and in the name of national campus journalists in the country, we appreciate our father of journalism, Omatseye.”

    The student leader urged the writer to keep the legacy alive.

    Oloyede said: “Omatseye is not just a writer but an impact-making writer. He naturally impacts all with his write up. We sampled opinions, carried out a lot of investigation through opinions and questionnaires across Nigerian universities, polytechnics and college of education and he was chosen as credible.

    “We have sets of journalists who specialise in investigative journalism, particularly concerning this award. Although the award was given at the corridor of the Kwara State University, we particularly set some journalists in place who went through this and they gave us a credible, acceptable and reliable result. It took us about six months to collate and get the credible result.”

    President of Kwara State University Press Organisation, Ademola Solomon, said the award would enable the organisation to know the mind of campus journalism concerning the best writer and best columnist.

    “We came up with voting and Omatseye was chosen as the best columnist and writer the students voted for among Nigerian universities. Mrs Funke Egbemode of New Telegraph was voted the first runner-up and Mr Edward Dickson of Nigerian Tribune was voted the second runner-up.

    Describing the award as another honour, Omatseye added: “It is good that young people rate you and acknowledge you for your works. This award means that I should be careful with what I write, knowing that a lot of people are on the lookout. Young people are also attentive to what is going on in the society and to what I am doing. So, I have to be cautious of that, just as I have been. This award has given me a heightened sense of responsibility to help.”

  • The Nation special publication on MDAs

    The Nation Special Publication on Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDAs) scheduled for Monday, March 12, 2018 has been rescheduled for Monday, March 26, 2018.

    The shift in date was due to increased interest by MDAs.

    All enquiries for participation should be directed to:

    Simeon Ebulu

    The Group Business Editor

    The Nation

    Tel: 08023254106

    Email: simsebulu@yahoo.com