Tag: U.S.A

  • Healthcare company seeks partnership with African firms

    Fast rising American healthcare company Izzycare says it is seeking partnership with African institutions as it set sights on improving healthy living ‘that comes with a reward’ across the continent.

    The firm developed an app based consultations which will give enrollees an unlimited access to teams of high level doctors, psychologists and wellness coaches with their services costing only $10 for adults and $5 for teenagers and babies getting a free pass if parents are enrollees.

    Co- founder Joswell Valdez says they are looking for mostly partnerships with systems already on the ground, hospitals and health maintenance organisations (HMOs)

    “We are serious about improving the healthcare of Africans in terms of accessibility to world class doctors and other health experts from the U.S.A, China, India or wherever, we will bring the patient and specialist together under one platform.” Valdez said.

    He also called on investors to take advantage of their ICO to invest in the firm saying they welcome both big institutions and individual investors to be part of the plan to move the continent’s healthcare forward.

    Observers say, this development is coming at a time when Nigerian healthcare is in need of a major boost considering how thousands of patients suffered a great deal during the recent joint health workers ( JOHESU ) strike which shut down hospitals for weeks.

  • Against All Odds: Odujinrin becomes 1st African to travel round the world

    Against All Odds: Odujinrin becomes 1st African to travel round the world

    It is a common saying that the world would make way for a man whose words and actions shows that he knows where he is going. The very inspiring story of Captain Ademilola Oyewale Odujinrin; a Nigerian pilot who began his expedition to fly round this terraqueous globe we call earth in nine months is a quintessential example of a dreamer bringing his dreams to fruition “against all odds”.

    He is the first pilot of African descent to fly solo round the world in a relatively small plane. His achievement is a great beacon light of hope to this generation; one that has totally changed the narrative for good about the African people, especially – Nigeria.

    Captain Odujinrin ‘Lola’ as he is fondly called held a press briefing on Thursday, 13th of April, 2017 at the press conference with newsmen held at the Murtala Muhammad Airport in Lagos. ‘Lola’ dedicated his achievement to the Nigerian people; especially to the younger generation of dreamers. He urged the youths to embrace hard work and persistence, and to believe that they only can make or create their luck.

    According to him, his overwhelming passion for Aviation started when he was yay high – between 7 to 10 years of age. His greatest inspiration was his late Uncle who was a pilot who sometimes take him inside the cockpit of the aircraft: That was the beginning of his unflinching zest for Aviation. “I can remember one night I was flying a kite and I noticed aeroplanes flying across the sky. Then I asked my dad where the planes were going. He replied me saying ‘they are going to Lagos – Murtala Mohammed Airport’,” he said. That was also a seminal moment for his aviation foray.

    Talking about some of the challenges that he and his team had to grapple with, Lola explained saying, “The challenges were numerous, however, the major one was the finance. However, one that was closely associated to securing finance was self-believe. If we believe enough in ourselves and our dreams, financial challenges can always be surmounted.

    The second most challenging part of the journey was the weather. In most parts of the world it was rainy season. Although in Nigeria the season for rain is usually in June, but it was different for other places. We (I and my plane) were stuck in south-eastern Asia for two months,” he said.

    His remarkable journey which began in June 2016 in Washington DC, U.S.A, was launched by the Ooni of Ife, Oba Adeyeye Enitan Ogunwusi, who blessed the voyage and described Nigeria as a fortunate country with great people capable of changing Africa for better as there is one Nigerian out of every four black people on earth.

    The World Tour saw Lola fly over 25 countries, had 35 stops, and for 300 odd hours in his small plane which hardly provided him the opportunity to stretch his body during his time in the air for a duration of 9 months. He began his journey from Washington DC, U.S.A, to Iceland, then Europe, and into Africa via United Arab Emirates (UAE), India, and Asian sub-continent. He flew over some islands before undertaking the longest legs of the journey across the Pacific Ocean between Hawaii and California, and back to Washington DC where he ended the journey.

    Lola in some spates of emotions and words recounted his experiences while seeking sponsorship and endorsement, especially from Nigerian organizations. According to him, it is very regrettable that no Nigeria Company was willing to offer support and endorsement for the project. It took visionary and benevolent companies like Transcend, Air Djibouti, and Tolaram Group which are foreign companies to see the importance of the project, and the sundry benefits it has; not just to the companies, but to changing the narrative of the African people for good.

    With respect to creating an enabling and congenial environment for dreamers like Lola to thrive and not just survive, he said “I appreciate and understand that I was privileged to travel, however, I know we also have some Nigerians who travel and wasted the opportunity; so the argument is on both sides. What we are advocating is for the government in whose hands the destinies of these many and ubiquitous dreamers are, should create an enabling environment for them to achieve their dreams.

    “The Ooni of Ife spent sometime in the United States talking about creating an enabling environment for talent, skills, and brainchildren to find expression, application, and fulfillment.

    “Our policy wonks in the senate and the federal government need to begin to create more policies and put more concrete structure on ground that will enable you and I fulfill our Nigerian dream.

    “Also talking about the enabling environment, I was pleasantly surprised when I saw the level of infrastructures – roads, street lights etc., in Lagos. Lagos has change; now that is a positive step in the right direction.

    Lola restated that the reason for him embarking on such a long, arduous, and sometimes dangerous journey was to be a joyous daybreak to end the long nights of psychological debacles and manacles placed upon the Nigerian youths by their environment. Everyone is a star, and should be given the right environment to blossom, boom, and not gloom.

    ‘Lola’ as he is fondly called by his friends and associates, hails from Ijebu Remo, he was given birth to in England, before his parent relocated to Lagos, and like every other Lagos child he grew up and spent his childhood in Lagos.

    Twitter: @memorinken

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    Email: brandphase@yahoo.com

  • Trump includes Nigerian in strategic team

    Trump includes Nigerian in strategic team

    United States President-elect, Donald Trump, on Wednesday formally unveiled  Nigerian Bayo Ogunlesi as a member of his policy and strategic team.

    The team will advise the president on economic matters.

    Trump’s Transition Team in a statement on Wednesday, said the president-elect also announced three additional members to join the forum.

    “Earlier this month, President-elect Trump established the President’s Strategic and Policy Forum and announced an initial round of 16 members. “The Forum is composed of some of America’s most highly respected and successful business leaders.

    “They will be called upon to meet with the President frequently to share their specific experience and knowledge as the President implements his economic agenda.

    “The Forum will be chaired by Stephen A. Schwarzman, the Chairman, CEO, and Co-Founder of Blackstone.

    “America has the most innovative and vibrant companies in the world, and the pioneering CEOs joining this Forum today are at the top of their fields,” Trump said.

    According to Trump, my administration is going to work together with the private sector to improve the business climate and make it attractive for firms to create new jobs across the United States from Silicon Valley to the heartland.

    Members of the Forum are to provide their individual views to the President, informed by their unique vantage points in the private sector on how government policy impacts economic growth, job creation and productivity.

    The Forum is designed to provide direct input to the president on many of the best and brightest in the business world in a frank, non-bureaucratic and non-partisan manner.

    With Wednesday’s announcement of three additional members, the individuals on the Forum now include Adebayo “Bayo” Ogunlesi, Chairman and Managing Partner, Global Infrastructure Partners”.

    The others are Stephen A. Schwarzman (Forum Chairman), Chairman, CEO, and Co-Founder of Blackstone; Paul Atkins, CEO, Patomak Global Partners, LLC, Former Commissioner for the Securities and Exchange Commission; and Mary Barra, Chairman and CEO, General Motors.

    Toby Cosgrove, CEO, Cleveland Clinic; Jamie Dimon, Chairman and CEO, JPMorgan Chase & Co; Larry Fink, Chairman and CEO, BlackRock; Travis Kalanick, CEO and Co-founder, Uber Technologies.

    Also in the forum are; Bob Iger, Chairman and CEO, The Walt Disney Company; and Rich Lesser, President and CEO, Boston Consulting Group, are also on the forum.

    Also in the economic advisory forum are Doug McMillon, President and CEO, Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.; Jim McNerney, Former Chairman, President, and CEO, Boeing; Elon Musk, Chairman and CEO, SpaceX and TeslaIndra Nooyi, Chairman and CEO of PepsiCo.

    The list also includes; Ginni Rometty, Chairman, President, and CEO, IBM; Kevin Warsh, Shepard Family Distinguished Visiting Fellow in Economics, Hoover Institute, and Former Member of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System; Mark Weinberger.

    The rest are; Global Chairman and CEO, EY; Jack Welch, Former Chairman and CEO, General Electric; and Daniel Yergin, Pulitzer Prize-winner, Vice Chairman of IHS Markit.

  • Trump picks Perry as energy secretary

    Trump picks Perry as energy secretary

    Former Texas Governor Rick Perry is the country’s next energy secretary picked by the U.S. President-elect Donald Trump.

    “As the governor of Texas, Perry created a business climate that produced millions of new jobs and lower energy prices in his state.

    Trump said that Perry will bring that same approach to America as secretary of energy.

    “My administration is going to make sure we take advantage of our huge natural resource deposits to make America energy independent and create vast new wealth for our nation.

    “ Perry is going to do an amazing job as the leader of that process,’’ Trumps said.

    Perry ran against Trump for the Republican nomination but dropped out of the race relatively early in the cycle.

  • NERC job: I’ll honour Senate screening – Prof Akinwande

    …Says I didn’t turn down the appointment

    Prof. Akintunde Ibitayo Akinwande, nominated for the Chairmanship of Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC), has said that he will honour an invitation for screening by the Nigerian Senate after clearing with his current employer, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), U S A.

    This was contained in a letter, dated 26th October, 2016, to the Chairman of the Senate Committee on Power, Steel Development and Metallurgy, Sen. Enyinnaya Abaribe, sent through the Special Adviser to the President on National Assembly Matters, Sen. Ita Enang.

    According to a statement by the Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Femi Adesina, Prof. Akinwande said he did not turn down the offer by President Muhammadu Buhari.

    The Professor of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science explained that: ‘‘News reports in Nigeria that I have rejected President Buhari’s nomination to be Chairman of Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission have been brought to my attention.

    ‘‘I have the greatest respect for President Buhari. I am fully behind the change he has brought and is bringing to the way Government business is conducted in Nigeria.

    ‘‘I am deeply honored that Mr. President and his team thought me worthy for this important national assignment and sought me out for it.  I  am  a  tenured  professor  of  electrical  engineering  at  the  Massachusetts  Institute  of  Technology.

    ‘‘As such I am contractually  constrained  to  seek  formally  the  consent  of  the  university  for  a  leave  of  absence  before presenting myself to the Senate for screening and if confirmed take on the assignment.’’ he added

    He apologized to the Senate Committee for not showing up for the screening process scheduled for Tuesday, October 25, 2017, noting that it was not out of disrespect for the institution.

    He said he would be available for the screening after clearance from the MIT.

  • South Korea, U.S. sign MoU to enhance military training cooperation

    The South Korea Military Academy and U.S. Combined Forces Division have on Friday signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) to expand military training cooperation for the enhancement of the alliance between the two countries.

    A spokesman for the South Korea Military Academy said in Uijeongbu (South Korea), that under the MoU, the combined division would assist South Korean military cadets to participate in the “Sandhurst” competition to be held in the U.S. Military Academy at West Point.

    The annual competition for boosting combat skills was being attended by many other military cadets from across the world.

    According to the spokesman, the combined forces would select American soldiers who have experience with the competition to transfer their military tactics and command and control system knowledge to the participating Korean military cadets.

    He said the military academy would offer opportunities for American soldiers to learn more about Korean culture and history.

  • LASACO Assurance loses Chairman

    THE Chairman of LASACO Assurance Plc,Mr. Edward Akin Leigh,  is dead.

    He was aged 65.

    The well-known  administrator, oil/gas and  business management consultant passed on last Monday.

    Leigh was educated at the Methodist Boys’ High School and King’s College, Lagos from 1961 to the 1967 and graduated from University of Ibadan, Oyo State in 1971.

    He also attended Graduate School of Business Administration, University of Wisconsin, Madison, Wisconsin, U.S.A. where he obtained MBA in 1974.

    He worked in Mobil Nigeria  before voluntarily resigning in 1994 to set up his own firm.

    He held the traditional titles of “Baaloro of Itoku” and “Asiwaju Gbadeniyi of Egba Land”.

    He is survived by his wife,Adenike and children.

  • Beware of people who pretend to be your friend

    Beware of people who pretend to be your friend

    Some people have accused Bradley Manning and Edward Snowden of being traitors. But this obscures a deeper and more important question. If the government of the United States is engaged in endless acts of lawless violence, as the documentary evidence clearly demonstrates, (See Fred Branfman, ‘World’s Most Evil and Lawless Institution? The Executive Branch of the U.S. Government’: http://www.alternet.org/investigations/executive-branch-evil-and-lawless) then it is not Manning and Snowden who are the traitors for providing evidence of this violence and the surveillance necessary to carry it out.

    The real traitors are all of those other employees of intelligence agencies who say nothing while they collaborate with the endless and often secret perpetration of violence by the U.S. government and its allied governments in our name.

    Why does this matter? It matters because it tells us that thousands of individuals are willing to collaborate, without the intervention of analytical thought, compassionate feeling or conscience, with the use of violence. And that bodes ill for our society.

    Collaborators and traitors take many forms: they are prevalent in warfare but common in ‘ordinary’ society as well, and labels such as ‘scab labourer’ are used to describe them. Most frequently, they are those relatives and friends who ‘stab you in the back’. Why do so many people collaborate with perpetrators of violence? An understanding of their psychological profile will tell us this.

    First, collaborators are terrified and they are particularly terrified of those individuals (usually one or both parents or other significant adults) who perpetrated violence against them when they were a child although this terror and, remarkably, the identity of their perpetrator(s) remain unconscious to them. Second, because they are terrified, they are unable to defend themselves against the original perpetrator(s) but also, as a result, they are unable to defend themselves against other perpetrators who attack them later in life.

    This lack of capacity to defend them leads to a third feeling – a deep sense of powerlessness. Thus, terrified, defenseless and powerless, some victims will try to placate the perpetrator. Victims who resort to placation, the fourth attribute of collaborators, will invariably fear those individuals who resist the perpetrator’s violence simply because resistance ‘violates’ their powerless ‘strategy’ of placation.

    The strategy of placation is also attractive to collaborators because they have a warped sense of empathy and sympathy, the fifth attribute. They will have empathy and sympathy for the perpetrators of violence, rather than the perpetrator’s victims, as an outcome of how they were emotionally damaged as a child.

    Having unconsciously ‘chosen’ collaboration and betrayal as a means of ‘defending’ themselves against personal victimisation, the collaborator will now acquire a deep sense of self-hatred (precisely because they cannot defend themselves and now betray others) which, in turn, will
    negate any remaining sense of personal self-worth.

    However, it is too terrifying and painful for the collaborator/traitor to be conscious of any of these feelings, so they will usually exhibit an eighth attribute if challenged: self-righteous justification for their collaboration/betrayal often expressed in either ideological/religious
    terms or as sympathy for the perpetrator.

    One version of this occurs when collaborators justify their collaboration with perpetrators of violence in terms of a supposed ‘obligation to obey’, although they might not use this precise language: many collaborators will characterise their obedience as ‘loyalty’, ‘support’ or ‘helpfulness’ in order to mask from themselves the fear that drives their submissive
    behaviour. For collaborators, the importance of obedience also far outweighs any sense of personal moral choice. If you are scared to resist violence, then you must make a virtue out of submission and obedience.

    Collaborators/traitors invariably exhibit a ninth attribute: they unconsciously project their fear and self-hatred, as outcomes of their own victimhood, as fear of and hatred for the perpetrator’s victims.

    Finally, as a result of all of the above, the collaborator will exhibit a tenth attribute: the delusion that they are ‘in control’; that is, they are no longer (and never were) the victim of violence themselves. Tragically, of course, this delusion is a trap: an individual is never safe in the role of collaborator. The perpetrator might turn on them at any time.

    Collaborators and traitors learn their ‘craft’ during childhood. Most usually it will originate when a parent terrorizes the child (by threatening and/or inflicting violence) into collaborating with this parent against the other parent and/or the child’s siblings. Sometimes it
    originates when a teacher terrorizes the child into collaborating with the teacher against the child’s fellow students, perhaps to find out who was responsible for some minor ‘wrongdoing’.

    The collaborator will perform this role throughout their life as they now unconsciously recognise and identify with those who are most violent, including state authorities that inflict ‘legitimised’ violence on those individuals perceived as ‘enemies’ or ‘criminals’.

    If you wish to publicly identify yourself as someone who will not collaborate with violence, you are welcome to sign online ‘The People’s Charter to Create a Nonviolent World’ http://thepeoplesnonviolencecharter.wordpress.com

    Robert has a lifetime commitment to understanding and ending human violence. He has done extensive research since 1966 in an effort to understand why human beings are violent and has been a nonviolent activist since 1981. He is the author of ‘Why Violence?’ http://tinyurl.com/whyviolence.  He can be reached via:  flametree@riseup.net  or visit website: http://robertjburrowes.wordpress.com