Tag: Victor Ifijeh

  • The Nation appoints Adesina as Editor

    THE Board of Directors of Vintage Press Limited has appointed Mr Adeniyi Adesina as Editor of The Nation .

    Adesina’s appointment was announced on Thursday by Managing Director/Editor-in-Chief, Mr. Victor Ifijeh.

    Adesina succeeds Mr Gbenga Omotoso, the pioneer editor of the newspaper, who is now a commissioner-designate in Lagos State. Omotoso has been screened by the Lagos State House of Assembly, following his nomination by Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu.

    The Board of Directors, according to Ifijeh, praised Omotoso “for his outstanding performance, commitment to duties and his immense contributions to the phenomenal growth  of The Nation  in  its 13 years of existence.”

    The Nation hit the newsstands on July 31, 2006, with the credo: Truth in Defence of Freedom.

    Two years later, it began printing in three locations : Lagos, Abuja and Port Harcourt. This enabled it to get to  most towns and cities in the six geo-political zones serving timely and fresh news.

    The feat earned The Nation instant acceptance by readers and advertisers. It quickly climbed up the ladder to become the market leader and the widest circulating newspaper in Nigeria.

    Other appointments announced on Thursday are: Mr. Lawal Ogienagbon (Managing Editor)—Editorial Services, Dr Emmanuel Oladesu (Deputy Editor)—Daily, and Mr. Bunmi Ogunmodede (News Editor).

    Adesina joined The Nation as Deputy Editor (Saturday) in April 2010. He was reassigned as Deputy Editor (News) of The Nation in August 2010, the position he held until November, 2018.

    While on Leave of Absence, he served as Chief Press Secretary (CPS) to Osun State Governor Adegboyega Oyetola between December 2018 and August 5, 2019.

    Read Also: The Nation marks 13th anniversary with praises, prayers

    In almost three decades of journalism practice, he worked with Prime People, National Concord, AM News, Punch and News Star newspapers among others, covering various beats.

    He worked on the three titles at Punch, serving as Assistant Editor, Saturday Punch in charge of Sports in 2001 and Assistant Editor in charge of News, between 2002 and 2004. He was Head of Foreign desk of The Punch from 2005 to 2006.

    Adesina was appointed Editor of News Star in 2007, the position he held until 2009.

    He attended the University of Lagos for his degrees, graduating in 1987 and bagging a Master’s in Mass Communication.

    Adesina has attended professional seminars and training programmes at home and in the United Kingdom and Denmark. He is married and blessed with children.

    Erstwhile Deputy Editor Ogienagbon started his career as a reporter with The Punch. He moved over to the Daily Times and rose to the position of Deputy Editor. He also served as Deputy Editor of National Interest.

    The managing editor joined The Nation at inception, becoming the News Editor. He was promoted Deputy Editor (Daily) in 2010.  Ogienagbon holds B.Sc. in Mass Communication

    Until this appointment, Oladesu was since 2015, the group political editor. He will still oversee the political desk.

    He started his career as a Reporter/Features Writer with TNT Newspapers in 1997 before moving to The Comet as Education Reporter (1999-2002), Political Correspondent (2002-2005), Political Correspondent, The Nation (2005-2007), Senior Writer (2007-2008), Deputy Political Editor (2008-2014), and Group Political Editor.

    Oladesu won the 2014 DAME Political Reporter of the Year and NMMA Political Reporter of the year in 2015.

    The deputy editor holds a PhD in Educational Psychology from the University of Lagos.

    Oladesu obtained two Master’s degrees in Personnel Psychology from the University of Ibadan (2000) and in Educational Psychology from the University of Lagos (2017).

    He was the best graduating student of the Guidance and Counselling Department and overall best in the Faculty of Education when he bagged his first degree at the Ondo State University, Ado-Ekiti (OSUA) in 1995.   In 2016, he became an Associate of the Chartered Institute of Personnel Management (CIPM), a professional body he joined in 2004.

    Ogunmodede began his journalism career in 1995 at the Independent Communications Network Limited (ICNL), publishers of The News, A.M./P.M. News and Tempo magazine after graduating from the University of Ibadan.

    He joined The Comet at inception in 1999 working on the City/Metro Desk. He covered the activities of the Lagos State Government, reporting from the Secretariat in Alausa for six years, before being promoted as deputy news editor. He was News Editor of Nigerian Compass between 2008 and 2011.  Ogunmodede got the public service experience when he served as Special Assistant (Media) to former Ekiti State Deputy Governor Prof. Modupe Adelabu from 2013 to 2014 while on Leave of Absence. Before this appointment, he was the acting news editor.

     

  • The Nation MD beats closing gong at Stock Exchange

    The Nation MD beats closing gong at Stock Exchange

    • Share prices rise

    It was a historic moment yesterday for The Nation at the Nigerian Stock Exchange (NSE) as this newspaper commemorated its 10th anniversary by beating the closing gong at the stock market.

    Share prices at the Exchange bucked the downtrend and rallied the market, which had closed with a decline of 0.12 per cent last Friday.

    Yesterday, the exchange recorded an average gain of 0.26 per cent, equivalent to net capital gain of N24 billion.

    The symbolism was striking and exciting with many stockbrokers asking The Nation to frequent the market. They expressed the wish that the newspaper would consolidate on its gains of the last 10 years.

    Managing Director Victor Ifijeh, recounted how at inception in 2006, a particular edition of The Nation was taken to the doorstep of the Exchange by him, accompanied by General Manager Training and Development Soji Omotunde and distributed free to stockbrokers and other stakeholders in recognition of the importance of the market  and to draw awareness to the budding newspaper.

    Apart from Mr. Ifijeh and Mr. Omotunde, others senior executives of this newspaper who were with them yesterday are: Executive Director (Finance and Administration), Mr  Ade Odunewu; Editor (online)  Mr. Lekan Otufodunrin; Group Business Editor, Mr. Simeon Ebulu and Advertisement Manager Robinson Osirike.

    It was cheers all through as Ifijeh beat the closing gong, a privilege usually reserved for institutions and individuals with resounding achievements to show.

    In its 10 years of operations, The Nation has carved a niche for itself as one of Nigeria’s most decorated and widest circulating newspapers.

    It is also one of the successfully managed newspapers and the closest to the corporate governance standards set by the Exchange. The Nation has been voted many times as the best news medium in financial reporting by media award institutions. It is the current holder of the banking and finance, money market and capital market awards of the prestigious Nigerian Media Merit Award (NMMA).

    Chief executive officer of the Nigerian Stock Exchange (NSE), Mr. Oscar Onyema, commended The Nation for standing out in a highly competitive media market noting that newspapers play a very critical role in the stock market that thrives on information dissemination.

    According to him, the Exchange cherishes its relationship with The Nation as partners for the development of the capital market, a partnership that should be deepened by exploring other areas of cooperation.

    He said the newspaper should widen its support for the market by actively collaborating with the Exchange on its developmental initiatives as an official media partner.

    Ifijeh commended the management of the Exchange for the many strides at the stock market, its commitment to market integrity and good corporate governance by listed companies.

    He expressed the appreciation of the newspaper to the Exchange for its support over the years.

    “This is the beginning of better things to come for The Nation and the Exchange,” Ifijeh assured.

    He outlined that over the next 10 years, The Nation plans to grow its business and entrench best practices in line with the corporate governance standards at the Exchange with a view to listing the shares of the newspaper on the Exchange.

    “Many years ago, The Daily Times was one of the active companies on the exchange. Who says that the feat cannot be replicated?

    “We consider it a great privilege to be given the opportunity to close the stock market. In the next 10 years, we will not only come to ring the closing bell but also to ring the listing bell,” Ifijeh said to the applause of stockbrokers.

    Onyema assured that the Exchange would give the newspaper all necessary support to realise its ambition of listing on the Exchange.

    “We will work with you every step of the way to see the day you will come for listing of your shares,” Onyema assured.

    The Doyen of Shareholders who is the longest-trading stockbroker on the trading floor, Mr Sam Ndata, acknowledgedThe Nation as a toast of the stock market noting that most stockbrokers read the newspaper.

    “We are in love with it,” Ndata said, relating his personal experience of how in Port Harcourt, the commercial centre of the South South, the newspaper controls the readership because of what he described a s the newspaper’s “frankness”.

    He also urged the newspaper to work towards listing its shares on the stock market.

     

  • NSE hosts The Nation at 10

    NSE hosts The Nation at 10

    The management of The Nation Newspaper on Monday visited the Nigerian Stock Exchange (NSE) to mark the 10 years anniverary of the paper.

    Speaking at the NSE office, the Managing Director of The Nation, Mr Victor Ifijeh, noted that the media house looks forward to being listed on the Nigerian Stock Exchange soon.

    To celebrate The Nation at 10, the Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of the NSE, Oscar Onyema, presented the media house with a replica of the closing gong even as The Nation MD sounds the closing gong.

    The Nation MD was accompanied on the trip by Soji Omotunde, General Manager, Corporate Services; Ade Odunewu, Executive Director, Finance and Administration Managing Editor, Online, Business Editor, Simeon Ebule and Stock Exchange Editor, Taofeek Salako.

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  • Photos: The Nation visits NSE

    Photos: The Nation visits NSE

    Oscar Onyema presented a replica of the Closing Gong to the MD, The Nation Newspaper to mark 10years anniversary
    Oscar Onyema presented a replica of the Closing Gong to the MD, The Nation Newspaper to mark 10years anniversary

    Nation at NSE

  • Mother of The Nation’s MD interred amidst tears, eulogies

    THE Managing Director and Editor- in- Chief of The Nation newspaper, Mr. Victor Ifijeh, was in tears yesterday as the remains of his mother, Mrs. Elizabeth Ifijeh, were committed to mother earth.

    Mrs. Ifijeh died last November at 82.

    She was interred at her residence at Ojavun in Owan East local government area of Edo State.

    The sleepy town of Ojavun came alive as dignitaries from walks of life thronged the funeral service.

    The service was held at the open field of Egoh Primary School.

    The officiating minister, Pastor Micheal Afeigbe, recalled how the deceased helped to establish branches of The Redeemed Christian Church (RCCG) in the locality.

    He said she displayed rare qualities in promoting the work of God.

    He urged the gathering not to cry for the deceased because she has gone to meet God, but to reflect on the opportunity to repent of their sins.

    Guests were later treated to a lavish reception.

    Governor Adams Oshiomhole, who led other dignitaries, including his Ekiti State counterpart, Kayode Fayemi, who was represented by Hon Tayo Ekundayo, said the event was to thank God for giving a mother that produced the likes of Ifijeh.

    Oshiomhole, who added the qualities of the deceased were to the glory of God, pledged to sink a borehole in the locality in the next two weeks.

    Other dignitaries at the event were former Edo deputy governor, Peter Obadan; Editor in- Chief and General Manager, Vanguard newspapers, Gbenga Adefuye; Edo Commissioner for Information and Orientation, Louis Odion; Special Media Adviser to Oshiomhole, Prince Kassim Afegbua; Hon Pally Iriase and the management of Vintage Press Limited.

  • Awards mean more work, Edun tells The Nation staff

    Awards mean more work, Edun tells The Nation staff

    •Board chair felicitates with the Newspaper of the Year

    The Nation, Nigeria’s “widest circulating newspaper” was the toast of the media, as it won six top awards from a record 15 nominations at the 21st NMMA at the serene Ikogosi Warm Springs Resort at the weekend.

    Edun was received by a team, led by Managing Director/Editor-in-Chief Victor Ifijeh; Executive Director (Finance and Administration) Ade Odunewu; Editorial Board Chairman Sam Omatseye; Editor Gbenga Omotoso; and Online Editor Lekan Otufodunrin, among others.

    The other prizes won by The Nation were Editor of the Year, Capital Market Reporter of the Year, Money Market Reporter of the Year, Editorial Writing Prize and Power Reporter of the Year.

    This newspaper’s reporters were also finalists in categories, such as Columnist of the Year, Tourism Reporter of the Year, Human Rights Reporter of the Year, Telecoms Reporter of the Year, Oil and Gas Reporter of the Year, Investigative Reporter of the Year, Newspaper Reporter of the Year and Foreign News Reporter of the Year.

    Omotoso won the Dele Giwa Prize for Editor of the Year. The Editorial Board, which has won laurels for its editorials on critical issues, won the prize for Editorial Writing. Three of its editorials were finalists in the category. The winning entries were “Systemic rot”, “The real sacrifice” and “A time to clean the Augean stables.”

    Assistant Editor (News) Olukorede Yishau won the Intercontinental Bank Prize for Capital Market Reporter of the Year. Assistant Editor (Investigations) Joke Kujenya clinched the Peter Odili Prize for Power Reporter of the Year with her entry, “Why govt, workers quarrel over PHCN”, which gave rare insight into why workers of the Power Holding Company of Nigeria (PHCN) and the Federal Government were bickering over the agency’s privatisation.

    Senior Correspondent Collins Nweze won the UBA Prize for Money Market Reporter of the Year with his report, “National Assembly vs CBN.”

    Omotoso and Omatseye were finalists in the Columnist of the Year category.

    Serial award winner Olatunji Ololade was runner-up in three categories — Foreign News Reporter of the Year, Newspaper Reporter of the Year and Investigative Reporter of the Year.

    Assistant Editor Ozolua Uhakheme was runner-up in the Tourism Reporting category. Kunle Akinrinade was also a runner-up in the Human Rights Reporting category.

    Assistant Editor Lucas Ajanaku was runner-up in the Telecoms Reporter of the Year category. Also, Assistant Editor Emeka Ugwuanyi was a runner-up in the Oil and Gas Reporting category.

    Edun said the awards had placed more responsibility on the newspaper to do even better, adding that they mean more work by management and staff to surpass the achievements and remain the best.

    The one-time Lagos State commissioner for Finance said the honours the newspaper earned should not be one-off, but should be repeated next year and for many years to come.

    He cited the English football club, Manchester United, which won 20 league titles under its former coach, Alex Ferguson, but has been struggling this season under a new manager, David Moyes.

    Edun said many had started calling for the coach’s replacement although he had only been in charge for a short while.

    The implication is that having won multiple awards at NMMA, the efforts that yielded such reward must be sustained, he said.

    The chairman went on:”Let me use this opportunity to ask you to do what all successful companies, teams, groups, institutions do, which is that they use their success and the acknowledgement of their success as a springboard to re-commit themselves to what they are doing and to do even better, to go to even greater heights.

    “As we all know, you either keep growing, keep expanding and keep doing well or you fall back. “How long has Moyes been there and they are already calling for his head? That is because once you get used to success, you have to maintain it. So, well done.”

    Edun assured the management team and staff of the board’s backing and commitment towards making the newspaper the best.

    He said newspapers were important to the democratic process, adding: “We have a mandate to enhance democracy; we are fulfilling it. To do this, you must have commercial visibility. This recognition will enhance our commercial visibility so that we can continue to deliver on our mission. It is the paper to advertise in because we have the reach, the spread and the readership.”

    He said he was always proud of The Nation team of columnists, editors and reporters and prayed to God to guide them.

    On welfare, he said: “You have done your best; we will do ours. It is a wonderful Christmas.”

    Odunewu described the Newspaper of the Year as a thing of joy, saying: “It is the reward of hardwork.”

  • A Moment to Reflect on the Talakawa Condition in Nigeria and Our World

    A Moment to Reflect on the Talakawa Condition in Nigeria and Our World

    Talakawa: Hausa, noun: Of or pertaining to the poor. The poor as a social category, as a community of the desperately needy deserving of the solicitude of the wealthy and powerful

     Herald: English, noun. 1. A person, event or thing that precedes or comes before; forerunner, harbinger. 2. A person, event or thing that proclaims or announces: A good newspaper should be a herald for truth.

                Dictionary.com (online)

    This Sunday, February 24, 2013, I begin this weekly column in The Nation. Readers accustomed to reading my column, Talakawa Liberation Courier, in The Sunday Guardian, will immediately recognize that there is an echo of that column’s title in the title of this new column in another newspaper: Talakawa Liberation Herald. I could have retained the former title in this new discursive context, this new journalistic space. But since my “migration” from The Guardian, so to speak, represents for me a momentous event in my journalistic work of more than forty years in the Nigerian press, I decided that it was necessary for me to also change the title of the column.

    Perhaps some months or maybe even a year or two from now, I shall write fully on why I left The Guardian for which I have written continuously since it was founded in 1983, perhaps the only one left among the old or aging writers, academics and commentators that were there at the beginning of the Guardian group. For now, all I will allow myself to say is that I left without rancour or bitterness but with a great deal of sadness and anger. In the meantime, my “migration” to The Nation, I feel, is an occasion that provides a unique opportunity to reflect on the column itself, hoping in the process to clarify both for myself and for my readers what it is I have tried to do – and continue hoping to do – with and through the column. In a nutshell, this exercise entails the question of the informing perspectives, ideas and values on which the column is based. And of course, with regard to these perspectives, ideas and values, the central concept is the term “Talakawa”. Concerning this concept, I wish to address two central propositions, two cardinal theses that the readers of this piece will be as startling and as confounding as I find them. What are these two theses or propositions?

    In our country, Nigeria and in many regions and nations of the world, age-old cultural definitions and social meanings attached to the poor as a definite, recognizable demographic category are changing beyond recognition to include social groups and strata that would never have been remotely close to the actual and potential ranks of the desperately poor or needy. That is the first of our two propositions. Permit me to expatiate on it carefully.

    Now, I do not speak Hausa and neither can I claim to have deep ethnographic knowledge of Hausa culture and society. What I do know about the meanings attached to the term “Talakawa” comes mostly from information I have gleaned over the decades from colleagues and comrades who both speak the language and have insiders’ ethnographic knowledge of its culture and traditions. From these colleagues and comrades, I have learnt that with the addition of the suffix “wa” to any ethnic or social group, a distinct collective identity is inscribed on the designated group. Examples are “Hausawa” or “Yarubawa” for the Hausa and the Yoruba ethnic groups respectively. I have learnt also from these “native informants” that in the wake of the oil-boom and the rise of a class of arriviste nouveau riches whose special symbol of new-found, lavishly spent wealth was the Mercedes Benz, the term “Benzawa” was coined on this same principle of adding that suffix, “wa” to identify and draw attention to a particular social group. [Incidentally, in Kiswahili, we have “Wa-Benzi” for the Hausa “Benzawa”, the same word serving reverse roles as suffix in Hausa and prefix in Kiswahili!]

    At any rate, the most important thing that I wish to draw attention to in the term “Talakawa” is implied in the first of the two epigraphs to this piece. This is the idea of the poor as a community of the destitute and the needy deserving of the benevolence of the wealthy and the powerful. Behind this idea is the historic fact that in many traditional and strongly hierarchical societies of the world, most of the poor remain poor generation after generation. Through unexpected good fortune, a few individuals in a particular generation might escape the scourge of desperate poverty but for the most part, most don’t and do not even expect to. To repeat: that is what the term “Talakawa”, in its traditional or received historical and cultural meanings, basically implies: a social identity, a worldview in which life circumstances and chances are more or less permanently fixed. I may be wrong, but I strongly suspect that this is what many readers of this column will instinctively think about when they see the term “Talakawa” in the title of this column.

    But capitalism in all parts of the world has changed that profile forever, giving new twists to what is involved in being within the ranks of the very poor, thereby opening up the range of experiences attached to being a member of the “Talakawa”. Abstractly, theoretically, there is no single modern capitalist country or economy in the world in which moving out of age-old, generation-to-generation poverty is completely or effectively blocked from anybody. People move from rural farming communities to the cities, they move from one job to another, and they move from one trade or profession to new ones perpetually, all in the hope, the promise that they stand a chance of having better lives than their parents and grandparents. But except in the richest countries in the world with high-income economies, most people in our country and our world in fact remain poor and only a sprinkling among their offspring will have better lives than they had.

    “Talakawa” has historically become a broad, inclusive term that includes millions of factory workers and wage labourers who earn significantly less than the national, regional or local minimum wage; hundreds of thousands of vendors and hawkers whose daily and monthly trade turnovers are unbelievably paltry; uncountable numbers of grossly underpaid teachers and junior clerical staff; multitudes of pensioners and old people without solvent children to act as their social safety net in their last years. As I have repeatedly tirelessly in my column in The Guardian, 7 out of every 10 Nigerians live below the absolute poverty level; in some parts of the country, the figure is close to 8 out of ten in rural areas. In other words, and to use an analogy to drive home the point, like the group of animals that when molting completely shed their old skins, the term “Talakawa” has taken on new meanings, new expressions that were unthinkable in the traditional meanings attached to it. This is why unlike the “Talakawa” of old, the new “Talakawa” cannot expect – and at any rate will never get – the consistent, regular paternalistic benevolence of the wealthy and the powerful; they must fight it out by themselves, with the non-paternalistic help and solidarity of members of the elite who take up their cause. This leads logically to the second of our two propositions which, in my opinion, is far more confounding than the first proposition.

    In the new millennium, the demographic constituencies of the “Talakawa” have been massively expanded by new patterns in which the young and the highly educated are significantly represented. Two years ago, the Central Bank Governor, Sanusi Lamido Sanusi, gave the figure of over 20 million as the statistic for unemployed high school and university graduates with no prospects of employment anywhere in sight. This alarming figure is further compounded by the fact that the median age for Nigeria is 19. For those unfamiliar with the concept of the national median age, what it basically means is that 50% of Nigerians are below the age of 19 while 50% is above that age. If you raise the computational age to 30, then you get more than 65% of the Nigerian population below 30. In other words, there is a vast demographic bulge at the younger age strata of our population and this bulge feeds right into present and future specters of being and/or becoming “Talakawa” among considerable numbers of our the young of our society.

    We might choose to take some comfort in the fact that this phenomenon of great numbers of young and educated people falling into joblessness and poverty is indeed a global phenomenon, the effect – and resultant cause – of spirals of global crises in world capitalism. As the saying goes, misery loves company! In some European countries like Greece, Spain, Italy and Ireland, the figures for unemployed, educated and restless youths are close to 40%. And drawing from a personal experience, I have simply been stunned by the number of my undergraduate students at Harvard University who, in the last half a decade or so, have been expressing to me grave, terrified misgivings concerning what the future holds in stock for them.

    Each region and nation of the world must of course seek its own answers, its own solutions to the specter of being and becoming “Talakawa” – without of course being indifferent to issues of great inequalities between the various regions of the world. In the case of Nigeria, I wish to give as much emphasis as I can muster in saying that poverty, or the “Talakawa” condition, is the one single factor that unites all our ethnic and regional communities. Show me any one single geo-political zone, any state or group of states in the country where the poverty rate is better than the 7 out of 10 absolute poverty level and I will eat my words. Show me any part of the country in which, no matter how well the elites are doing politically and economically compared to other regional, zonal and ethnic competitors in the political class, the masses of the people are faring better than ordinary folks in other parts of the country and I will mortify my spirit by attending an all-night vigil of one of our most fanatical evangelical sects!

    Indubitably, the “Talakawa “ question is the bottom line of all the crises bedeviling our country since it is both directly and indirectly linked to all the other crises and challenges. This, by the way, is why this column can never possibly exhaust the range of issues it can and will take up. Beyond this and more impersonally, I would argue that the “Talakawa” condition ought to be the first item of discussion in a sovereign national conference that will sooner or later have to be convened if Nigeria is to survive as one unified, egalitarian and democratic society. In the weeks, months and years ahead, I hope to join my voice to the voices of other members of the “commentariat” [this playfully ludic term is, I believe, Victor Ifijeh’s] in The Nation and other organs of popular and progressive national conversation in our country