Tag: women

  • Women who made   headlines in 2015

    Women who made headlines in 2015

    The year 2015 is gradually coming to an end. For many, this is time to count their blessings and losses. For the womenfolk, it was a year that witnessed the good, the bad, as well as the ugly. As you take a cursory look, you also find some women who set the pace, changed records and made remarkable strides on the local and international scenes. Yetunde Oladeinde (Assistant Editor) and Gboyega Alaka unveil these women and the things that made them stand out.

    One woman that caused a big stir in the political scene this year is Aisha Alhassan. Her recent proclamation as winner of the 2015 governorship election in Taraba State has attracted varied reactions from across the country, more so as she gets the enviable position of the first woman to be elected governor in the history of Nigeria.

    The tribunal sitting in Abuja had nullified the election of Governor Darius Dickson Ishaku of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) during the April 11, 2015 election and declared Senator Aisha Jummai Alhassan of the All Progressives Congress (APC) as the duly elected governor in the state.

    Although she has been sworn in as Minister of Women Affairs just days earlier, Alhassan, fondly called Mama Taraba, is most likely to resume duties at the Government House, Jalingo, seat of the Taraba State government, if the Appeal Court upholds the judgment of the Taraba State Elections Petitions Tribunal.

    Interestingly, Alhassan has had a series of other ‘firsts’ attached to her career, having been the first female to contest a leadership position in the Students’ Union Government at the Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria in 1978; she later became the first female acting president of the union.

    Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie

    Over the years, Chimamanda Ngozi Adiche has received accolades and recognition for standing out in the literary world. This year, she added another feather to her crowded cap, with the Baileys Prize as its ‘Best of the Best’.

    During the year, Half of a Yellow Sun was named the best winner from the last decade of the women’s prize for fiction.

    Adichie’s book competed with nine other titles that include Zadie Smith’s On Beauty to Eimear McBride’s A Girl Is a Half-formed Thing. At the end of the contest, Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie’s novel on the Biafran war, Half of a Yellow Sun, emerged as the best winner of the women’s prize for fiction of the last decade – by both the public and a 10-man strong judging panel.

    The award, now known as the Baileys Women’s Prize for Fiction, chose to mark its 20th anniversary by asking the chairs of judges of the past 10 years – including Joanna Trollope, Shami Chakrabarti and Daisy Goodwin – to pick their ‘best of the best’ winner from the last decade. Andrea Levy’s Small Island, which won the award in 2004, had previously been named the “Best of the Best” novel in the prize’s first decade.

     Adichie said she had “a lot of respect for the books that have won [the award] in the past 10 years and also for the books that have been shortlisted.”

    “This is a prize I have a lot of respect and admiration for – over the years it’s brought wonderful literature to a wide readership that might not have found many of the books,” said the novelist. “I feel I am in very good company. To be selected as ‘Best of the Best’ of the past decade is such an honour. I’m very grateful and very happy.”

    Kemi Adeosun

    Within the financial sector today, the name that readily comes to mind is Kemi Adeosun, the current Finance Minister. As soon as her name was mentioned, the rumour mills went agog with many wondering if she was the right person for the job. However, when she stepped out in the senate to talk about her plans for the sector, it was obvious that the lady certainly knows her onions.

    Her antecedents also speak volumes. She earned a Bachelor of Science degree in Economics from the University of East London and a Postgraduate Diploma in Public Financial Management from the University of London. She then commenced her career as an Accounting Assistant at the British Telecom Company, London, from 1989 till 1990, after which she moved to Goodman Jones, London, working as a Senior Audit Officer from 1990 till 1993.

    She became Manager of Internal Audit at London Underground Limited, London and Prism Consulting from 1994 till 2000, before joining Price Waterhouse Coopers, London as Senior Manager from 2000 till 2002. In 2002, Adeosun became Financial Controller at Chapel Hill Denham Management and, subsequently, Managing Director in 2010. After working with Quo Vadis Partnership as Managing Director in 2010 and 2011, she was appointed Commissioner of Finance in Ogun State from 2011 till 2015.

    Linda Ikeji

    This year, super blogger Linda Ikeji stole the show online. The writer, former model and entrepreneur, best known for her controversial publications and her media contributions to the development of the Nigerian entertainment industry, continued expanding her horizon in a unique way. The celebrity blogger recently played host to a few of her friends at a house-warming party at her multi-million naira mansion in Banana Island, Ikoyi, Lagos.

    Controversy  about the source of the money used for purchasing her Banana Island mansion estimated to have cost a whopping N600 million also dominated the scene this year.

    Ibukun Awosika

    During the year, Mrs. Ibukun Abiodun Awosika became the new Board Chairperson of First Bank, Nigeria’s second largest lender. She took over the helm of affairs from Prince Ajibola Afonja, who retired. This appointment makes Awosika the first woman to assume this position since the establishment of the bank in 1894.

    Just before this appointment, Awosika who has a bachelor’s degree in Chemistry from the University of Ife was a non-Executive Director of the bank.

    Awosika is an alumna of the Chief Executive Programmes of Lagos Business School and the Global Executive MBA Programme of the prestigious IESE Business School, Barcelona, Spain.

    She started her career as an Audit Trainee during her National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) at Akintola Williams & Co (now Deloitte). After her NYSC, she moved to Alibert Nigeria Ltd, a furniture company where she worked as a Showroom Manager for three months. She resigned from Alibert Nigeria Ltd at the age of 25 to begin her entrepreneurship journey. She started her own furniture-manufacturing company, Quebees Ltd, that later evolved to The Chair Centre Ltd.

    Ibukun Awosika also sits on the board of several other companies, among which are Cadbury Nigeria Plc, Digital Jewels Ltd and Convention on Business Integrity. She is also the Chairman, Board of Trustees of Women in Management and Business (WIMBIZ), as well as Chairman of Intermac, organisers of SmartCard Conference in Nigeria.

    Aisha Muhammadu Buhari

    Her photographs before, during the political campaigns and after the election graced the pages of magazines, newspapers and television. Simple and beautiful, Aisha Muhammadu Buhari stepped out gracefully as the wife of Muhammadu Buhari, the President of the Federal republic of Nigeria, who assumed office on May 29, 2015 after defeating the then President, Dr. Goodluck Jonathan.

    The cosmetologist and beauty therapist was born in Adamawa State, North-Eastern Nigeria. Her grandfather, Alhaji Muhammadu Ribadu, was Nigeria’s first Minister of Defence. Her father was a civil engineer while her mother is a descendant of the Ankali family, renowned farmers and textile giants.

    She holds a Bachelor of Arts degree in Public Administration from the Ahmadu Bello University (ABU), and a master’s degree in International Affairs and Strategic Studies from the Nigerian Defence Academy (NDA), Kaduna. She obtained a Diploma in Beauty Therapy from the Carlton Institute of Beauty Therapy, Windsor, United Kingdom and specialised in Permanent Make-up, Mesotherapy and Miocro-dermabrasion. She holds a Post-graduate Diploma in Cosmetology and Beauty from Academy Esthetique Beauty Institute of France. She is a member of the United Kingdom Vocational Training and Charitable Trust and the International Health and Beauty Council.

    Mo Abudu

    Mosunmola Abudu, popularly known as Mo Abudu, literally took over the film industry when she premiered her movie titled Fifty this year. The package which featured Ireti Doyle, Dakore Egbuson-Akande, Omoni Oboli and Nse Ikpe-Etim was directed by Biyi Bandele with Mo Abudu as the executive producer.

    Fifty had its London Film Festival premiere in October, and critics say the production is Mo Abudu’s quest to showcase African women coming of age, vis a vis aspirations and dilemmas faced by their contemporaries everywhere, while yet navigating traditions and obligations.

    Set in Lagos, “a city of disproportionate and breathtaking contrasts,” Fifty celebrates the pulse and energy of this fast developing metropolis and explores the diversities and complexities of its colourful people through the lenses of its women.

    The energetic talk show host, TV producer, media personality, human resources management consultant, entrepreneur and philanthropist has been described by Forbes as “Africa’s Most Successful Woman.”

    Amina J Mohammed

    For close watchers of government operations in Nigeria, the name Amina J Mohammed, Honourable Minister of Environment, may not be a strange one after all. Aside being one of the six women that made President Muhammed Buhari’s ministerial list and scaled the senate screening hurdle, Mohammed comes with an incredibly loaded CV, having impressed in several other endeavours.

    The latest on her list of exploits before coming home to be minister was her role as Special Adviser to the UN Secretary-General, Ban Ki-Moon on post-2015 development planning. In that capacity, she acted as the link between the Secretary-General, his High Level Panel of eminent persons (HPL), and the General Assembly’s Open Working Group (OWG) amongst others.

    Before taking up that appointment, Ms Mohammed had served as founder and CEO of the centre for development Policy Solutions and as an Adjunct Professor for the Master’s in Development Practice Program at Columbia University. She had also worked as Senior Special Assistant on Millennium Development Goals, serving three Nigerian Presidents (Obasanjo, Umaru Yar’a dua and Goodluck Jonathan) over a six-year period in the process. Between 2002 and 2005, she coordinated the Task Force on Gender Education for the Millenium Project; while in 2005, she was charged with the co-ordination of Nigeria’s debt relief funds towards the achievement of the MDGs.

    For her activities in the Nigerian public sector, Mohammed was recently described by American fashion and lifestyle magazine Vogue, as “a public sector strategist involved in crafting and implementing fiscal projects aimed at fighting poverty in Nigeria.”

    She was also amongst the 13 women photographed by the magazine for a feature story on the role of women in the ongoing UN climate change conference.

    Mohammed was also CEO and founder, Think Tank Centre for Development Policy Solutions. Her appointment as minister is therefore another high point, expected to avail her more opportunity  to bring her wealth of experience to bear on her own country, helping the new President Buhari-led government to achieve its much-touted change mantra.

    Born in 1961 of a Nigerian father from Gombe and a British mother, Amina Mohammed also founded Afri-Projects Consortium, a multidisciplinary firm of engineers and quantity surveyors, serving as Executive Director. She also worked with architectural engineering firm, Archon Nigeria in association with Norman and Dawbarn, UK.

    Asisat Oshoala

    In a year that is rolling by rather quietly for Nigeria’s sportswomen, football player, Asisat Oshoala stands out with the highest achievement and impression.

    First she clinched a coveted spot in January in the star-studded Liverpool FC female team, to the delight of family, friends, fans and Nigeria’s Football Federation; and though the amount of that contract was ‘undisclosed,’ one could be rest assured that the 20-year old football talent had negotiated herself into the elite group of female footballers, and away from poverty of local football.

    A few weeks before that, the former Rivers Angels striker had earlier been named African Women Player of the year by the Confederation of African Football (CAF) for the year 2014, following her exceptional performance for her club and country that year.

    With club, she had won the Nigerian Professional Women’s Football League title in 2014 (having also won it in 2013); while she and her colleagues in the national team stunned the world at the 2014 FIFA U-20  Women’s World Cup in France, finishing as runners-up behind Germany.  Her performance at that tournament and at the African Women’s Championship, where Nigeria won her seventh African Women Championship title earlier, contributed to her emerging as CAF female footballer of the year. For her performance, she was also named Most Valuable Player at both tournaments.

    Her highest point in the outgoing year would however be her emergence as the inaugural BBC Women’s Footballer for the 2014/2015 season in May.

    To underline the quality and value of the award, Oshoala won it ahead of Veronica Boquete (Spain and FFC Frankfurt) Nadine Kessler (Germand andVFL Wolfsburg), Kim Little (Scotland and Seattle Reign FC) and Marta (Brazil and FC Rosengard).

    But for playing in a group of death that included Sweden, USA and Australia and generally posting a  poor run as a team, pundits are of the opinion that Oshoala would have again distinguished herself at the FIFA Women’s World Cup, as she scored a brilliant individual goal in the opening 3-3 draw against Sweden at the Women’s World Cup in Canada. Injury also stopped her from featuring at the Olympic qualifiers, inadvertently giving arch-rivals, Equatorial Guinea a lee-way to clinch the ticket at Nigeria’s expense.

    Omoni Oboli

    Wikipedia sums up Omoni Oboli’s personae as ‘actress, scriptwiter and producer. Perfect? No, as the online encyclopaedia forgot to include the tag, ‘movie director’.’

    She loves directing, she told a glossy lifestyle magazine in a recent interview; adding that directing means being able to give my script my DNA.” She directed her latest and rave-making film, First Lady, which she is very proud of and which recently premiered in the United Kingdom and across Nigeria with much pomp. First Lady has been described as’a comic drama with compelling storylines backed with impressive acting.’

    Aside the film, which stars top acts like Joseph Benjamin, Alexx Ekubo, Yvonnne Jegede, Chinedu Ikedieze, Anthony Monjaro and Omoni Oboli herself; another high point for Oboli was being named The Sun Nollywood Personality of the Year 2015.

    The Delta Born French graduate of the University of Benin, who kick-started her thespian career with a cameo role in the urban telling ‘Not My Will’ as far back as 1996 has certainly seen it all. Over the years, she has also garnered awards and recognitions. In 2010, she won the Best Actress – Narrative Feature at the Los Angeles Movie Awards, and the award for Best Actress at the Harlem International Film Festival. She was also nominated for the Best Actress in a Leading Role award at the 2014 ELOY Awards, for her movie, Being Mrs Elliot.

    Omoni Oboli was also unveiled in the year as Nunu milk brand ambassador, in a renewed Nutricima campaign to encourage mothers to fortify their kids with milk for adequate mental growth, enabling them ‘Grow Everyday’.

    Born in Benin and raised on the grounds of the Delta Steel Company (DSC) in Aladja, Delta State, Omoni  started acting with big time Nollywood movie stars in her first year in the university.

    Yemi Alade

    Afro-pop sensation, Yemi Eberechi Alade burst onto the Nigerian music scene in 2009 when she won the Peak Talent Show. But her hit song, ‘Jonny” sealed it for her, catapulting her into the galaxy amongst the stars of Nigeria, and indeed African music.

    In no time, she has amassed several nominations, awards and recognitions both locally and on the international scene.

    Her highest point in the year 2015 would be her emergence as Best Female Act in the MTV African Music Awards. She also got a nomination in the BET Awards in the Best International Act, Africa category, along with Wizkid, both of them losing the award to Stonebwoy from Ghana.

    In 2014, she also got nominations as Female Artiste of the Year in the Nigerian Entertainment Awards;  Female Artist of the Year at the City People Entertainment Awards and Best African Act at the MOBO Awards.

    In 2013, her potentials as a new act was also recognised by ELOY Awards, which nominated her as the Most Promising Female act in 2013.

    Before her Peak Talent Show feat, Alade had featured in an all-girls group called Noty Spices in 2005. But her hit song, Jonny, produced by Selebobo and leaked to the internet in 2013, dominated music charts in Tanzania, Kenya, Ghana, South Africa,Liberia, Uganda, Zimbabwe and the United Kingdom, and remains till date one of the best songs of 2013.

    She also headlined the Super Diva’s Nite at the 2013 Calabar Festival, and opened performances at the 2013 Headies Awards.

    Her first album, King of Queens was released on October 2, 2014.

    Born in 1989 in Abia State, to a Yoruba father and Igbo mother, Yemi Alade graduated from the University of Lagos with a degree in Geography.

    Dr Ibilola Amao

    Dr Ibilola Amao, Principal Consultant, at Lonadek has for two decades been in the forefront of youth empowerment and development in the country targeted at Vision 20:20.

    Amao’s Lonadek is an independent local content development organisation focused on building the capacity of Nigerians, Nigerian companies, businesses and vendors, in delivering quality goods and services in the oil and gas industry. Lonadek is therefore committed to the implementation of state-of-the-art Engineering IT solutions in the Oil and Gas industry by a highly skilled workforce and is driven by a passion to see more Nigerians excel and participate actively in High-Technology driven industries.

    For twenty years, Amao has been preoccupied with her Vision 20:20 Youth Empowerment and Restorative Initiative, focusing especially on the oil and gas industry, where from experience, she had discovered that Nigeria lacks adequate manpower and potential to make any impact anytime soon, if something drastic was not done. For her, a situation where only foreigners dominate the very lucrative sector, at the expense of Nigerians was no longer acceptable.

    This year’s edition, which held in May at the MUSON Centre, focused on career counselling, industry awareness and youth empowerment, and it was especially aimed at the most intelligent science technology, engineering and mathematics students from SS 1 to SS3, undergraduates and unemployed graduate, to catch a vision about creating value in information technology in Nigeria. The annual programme focuses on engendering and enterprise.

    Amao once said that she was prompted to undertake this mission, when sometime in 2005, she sat at a panel with foreign expatriates to recruit Nigerians into the industry and discovered rather shamefully that otherwise brilliant Nigerians flopped woefully when questions that required them to think outside the box  or apply  the knowledge they had in a skilled manner were thrown at them.

    Amao is UK-trained, having attended Manchester Business School, Bradford University and Queen Mary College, University of London. She holds a Ph.D in Computer-Aided-Design  and Draughting and a First Class honours degree in Civil and Structural Engineering. Amao is chairperson for the industry Advisory Team, Lagos State Technical and Vocational Education Board; a Fellow of the Energy Institute (EI), UK, a chartered member of the Nigerian Society of Engineers (NSE); a certified HR professional with the Chartered Institute of Personnel Managers (CIPM), a member of the Institute of directors programmes committee and coordinator of the Young Members & Graduate Empowerment at the Energy institute, UK, Lagos Branch.

    Itoro Eze-Anaba

    Itoro Eze-Anaba is to different people a saviour, a helper, a liberator and a defender. Her Mirabel Centre, founded in 2003 and located inside the Lagos State University Teaching Hospital, LASUTH,  Ikeja, is the first Sexual Assault Reform Centre in Nigeria, and second in the whole of West Africa. The centre offers medical examination and treatment of illnesses and injuries caused by assault, counsels victims, helps report cases to the police, offers legal information and refers victims to other agencies for help not provided by the centre – all for free.

    As a legal practitioner, Itoro had set out in the year 2000, traversing Nigeria and lobbying to get the Domestic Violence Bill (DVB), which she had initiated, to be passed into law. In the course of that, she met a 14-year-old, who told her a story of how her father had sexually assaulting her since she was 11; and this prompted her to conceive something more urgent to attend to the ugly scourge, hence the Mirabel Centre. At the last count, the centre has received and attended to well over 650 patients/victims.

    The centre is equipped with doctors and nurses, who are forensic medical examiners; and counselors, who have undergone training on sexual assault trauma confidentiality.

    For her invaluable services, Itoro has been variously honoured. This, she was amongst the three women nominated for Vlisco’s 2015 Women’s Month Award, for being a trend-setter and for all her hardwork in the battle against rape and sexual assault in the country.

    Itoro also established Blue Ribbon, the first ever all-male advocacy group campaigning for women’s rights in Nigeria

    Dotun Akande

    Dotun Akande, a banker, educator, initiator of the Patrick Speech and Language Centre and Pure Souls Learning Foundation for Children with Autism, this year emerged as the 2015 overall winner of the Vlisco award.

    Wondering what gave her an edge over others and she replies this way: “It was the work that we did. Somebody nominated me, that is how it works. Then we went to the polls and people voted for me. Autism won, it’s not Dotun that won. Ever since I won the awards, I have been relishing. A lot has happened. They pamper me, do my makeup and bring fabrics and clothes for me. I look elegant and it’s been a beautiful experience. I have also met a lot of people in the process. I have met great people. I have met wonderful people doing great work in the things that you do.”

    To have a total understanding of the issues, Akande had to go for training abroad and she is still attending courses. “I go out of my way to call friends abroad on updates and to clarify grey areas. I was in banking for 13years.” Apart from counselling and therapy, she has done some programmes, like the talent hunt concert, which is a yearly event. The inspiration came when her son was diagnosed with autism.

    “We started in 2008  and started with the Centre for children with Autism before starting the Patrick’s Speech and Language Centre. My first memorable case was one  little girl that came to the centre. We tried for over eight months to try to let her release her words. Then she was the first that started using words ‘like pass the ball’. She actually made a sentence and she is now in a regular school. She graduated to secondary school and her parents never left the shores of Nigeria, meaning that it is possible to get help here.”

  • Women praise family planning initiative

    Women of Alakia in Egbeda Local Government Area of Oyo State, have commended the Nigerian Urban Reproductive Health Initiative (NURHI) for opening a family planning clinic in their area.

    They noted that the family planning services have reduced maternal and child mortalities in the area, when compared to the past when they had little knowledge of it.

    The women stated this while speaking during an outreach programme organised by NURHI for primary health care centres in the area.

    One of the beneficiaries of the outreach, Mrs. Sekinat Salau, admitted that, in a bid to stop further child-bearing, she had been procuring abortions anytime she got pregnant, “but since NURHI brought the services to my health centre, I have not experienced pregnancy let alone undertaking an abortion.

    “I already have six children and I don’t want to have more. But it is difficult to deny my husband his marital right. That is why I am so happy that NURHI had extended its services to our council area”

    Another beneficiary, Mrs. Azeez said: “I did not benefit from the first phase. However, in the second phase, I have benefited from the services, and apart from this, I have been lectured on how family planning can help one’s social and economic life. So, family planning is more than just spacing of births,” Mrs Azeez, said.

    The family planning coordinator at the Alakia PHC, Mrs Bukola Akano, said the health initiative is a great opportunity for women in the area.

     

  • Women, youths demand cancellation of election in Bayelsa council

    Women, youths demand cancellation of election in Bayelsa council

    Hundreds of women and youths from Yenagoa Local Government Area, Bayelsa State have demanded the cancellation of the election in the area.

    They said the election in the capital city was marred by irregularities and inconsistencies in the results announced by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC).

    According to them, INEC officials refused to listen to the complaints of voters and agents of the All Progressives Congress (APC).

    They said the overall results were not a reflection of the results announced by the collation officer in the council.

    The state Youth Leader of the APC, Edison Sorgwe and a chieftain of the party, Alawei Opukeme-Jonah, who spoke on behalf of the aggrieved voters, said the result announced by the INEC’s collation officer were inconsistent with the number of rejected and cancelled votes.

    They said the same cases of ballot box snatching, irregularities and violence which INEC relied upon to cancel the election in Southern Ijaw also played out in Yenagoa and should be depended on to annul the election in the capital city.

    They said over eight members of the party were nursing their wounds in various hospitals after sustaining attacks from political thugs.

    “We have lost confidence in the ability of the Resident Electoral Commissioner, Barton Kpagih to conduct election. We are against the cancellation of Southern Ijaw Local Government election”,  he said.

    Also, the governorship candidate, APC, Bayelsa State, Chief Timipre Sylva, yesterday, asked INEC to cancel elections in two local government areas of Sagbama and Ekeremor and parts of Nembe, Ogbia and Yenagoa.

    Sagbama is the local government area of the state governor and candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Mr. Seriake Dickson, while Ekeremor is the local council of the Minister of State for Agriculture, Senator Heineken Lokpobiri.

    Sylva, in a statement signed by Sylva/Igiri Campaign Organisation (SICO), said the election should be cancelled following widespread violence, security breaches and manipulation that marred the poll in the councils.

    The former governor alleged in the statement signed by SICO’s Director, Media and Publicity, Chief Nathan Egba, that the breach in security and manipulation were caused by Dickson and PDP leadership.

    He said: “It is now a well-known fact that over 1000 armed men suspected to have been imported from Delta and Rivers states by governor Dickson stormed Ekeremor community where they unleashed terror on the entire community from the wee hours of election day for many hours before they were repelled by the army, only for them to return in the evening when the results were about to be collated.

    “The gunmen we suspect were hired for the sole purpose of assassinating the Hon. Minister for State, Agriculture, Senator Heineken Lokpobiri as they launched a sustained attack on his residence with grenades, dynamite and gunshots for hours before the army repel them.

    “He was very lucky to have survived that night as they returned in the evening to continue till they were repelled by the army. But in the meantime, they had carted away sensitive election materials to manipulate in favour of PDP and returned for collation.”

    According to Sylva, said in Sagbama, youths imported from neighbouring states hijacked materials that were meant for the riverine communities in the LGA including the ward of the former acting Governor of the state, Nestor Binabo.

    He said there was no election in wards 1 and 2 adding that the violence which swept across the state largely occurred in Sagbama, Ekeremor and Southern Ijaw.

    He further condemned the continuous breach of electoral laws by Dickson who allegedly stormed Yenagoa Coalition Centre to threaten APC agents and went to Oporoma in Southern Ijaw against the police directive.

  • Jibrilla apologises to women over poor representation

    Jibrilla apologises to women over poor representation

    Governor Muhammadu Jibrilla of Adamawa has apologised to women in the state for being under represented in his new appointments.

    Jibrilla made the apology while swearing in 49 newly-appointed Development Area Administrators at the Government House, Yola on Tuesday.

    He urged the women to bear with him, adding that he would compensate them in future political appointments.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that only one woman, Ms Esther Pius, made the list of the 49 administrators sworn in.

    “This is just the first major appointment made by this administration, I want to assure the women that they will be considered in future appointments,” he said.

    The governor said that the administrators were selected on merit and should therefore work toward justifying the confidence reposed in them.

    He said that his administration had embarked on various projects in major towns across the state and would soon reach out to the grassroots.

    He advised the people of the state to be security conscious and support security agencies in the fight against insurgency.

    Responding on behalf of the administrators, the Administrator of Madagali North Development Area, Mr Titus Ndzau, thanked the governor for the appointment and promised to deliver on their mandates.

  • Abia monarch, women back anti-corruption fight

    Abia monarch, women back anti-corruption fight

    Former chairman, Abia State Traditional Rulers’ Council, Eze Isaac Ikonne has reiterated his confidence in the President Muhammadu Buhari administration, urging residents to support the war against corruption.

    The Enyi 1 of Aba was the only traditional ruler in the state who welcomed then candidate Buhari into his palace, conferring him with the title Ogbuagu 1 of Aba.

    That action earned the monarch attacks by his fellow rulers, but he has not relented in his strong belief that the Buhari administration will restore the country’s lost glory.

    Eze Ikonne spoke as members of the President Buhari Grassroots Movement, Abia State Women Wing, visited him.

    He described the war on corruption as a step in the right direction, saying it will help to sanitise the system.

    The leader of the group, Rev. Mrs. Chinedu Nwogwugwu said they support President Buhari because of his sincerity in the anti-corruption fight in addition to his leadership antecedents.

    Lamenting how moneybags and unscrupulous politicians use women during campaigns and dump them thereafter, she urged women to engage in meaningful ventures.

    The women also held a rally at the Eziama Osusu Hall at Faulks Road, Aba, where Nwogwugwu lamented the extent and effects of corruption in the country.

    “It is unfortunate that during campaign and electioneering period, you will see our women going from one place to another and at the end, the politician will give them peanuts that will not be enough to buy even bread for the children and most times after they were elected and sworn into office, they will abandon the people that suffered to campaign for them. We are now being used as object of ridicule in the hands of politicians and that is why we are calling on them (women) to come out and join the president in his fight against corruption which has eaten deep into the economy of the country even more than cancer.”

  • Okauru, Stanbic IBTC director, others discuss women empowerment

    Okauru, Stanbic IBTC director, others discuss women empowerment

    Former Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS) chairperson, Ifueko Omoigui Okauru and other leading women in banking, taxation, telecommunication and other sectors of the economy have advised women on how to be successful in their careers and businesses.

    Speaking at the Women In Successful Careers (WISCAR), seventh end of year graduation/induction ceremony held in Lagos, she said to lead change and achieve needed results, there should be mindset adjustment to continuous research, innovation, enquiry, progress, learning and self improvement.

    The First female presidential candidate, Prof. Remi Sonaiya; Chief Technical Officer, MTN Nigeria, Lynda Saint-Nwafor and Executive Director, Stanbic IBTC Bank, Yewande Sadiku,  shared their experiences and urged women on how to build successful careers without affecting the homes.

    Speaking on the theme: “Women Leading Change”, Okauru said “the change we seek should be a mind that does not just accept what is said, but questions, analyses, researches, learns from others, diversify our thinking by being with people who do not think like us, learning from them to achieve the results we seek,” she added.

    WISCAR graduated its sixth stream of mentees and inducted the seventh set who will go through the intensive and unique twelve months structured WIN with WISCAR mentoring program. As a contribution to the WISCAR legacy, the graduating mentees presented a cheque of N350, 000. Mentees from other streams shared inspiring stories.

    The founder of WISCAR, Mrs. Amina Oyagbola, said she realised that Nigerian women are hardworking,  diligent and creative. “Nigerian women are achievers. This has been further brought home to me recently by the great strides WISCAR made when we set up sub-committees of the WISCAR advisory board,” she said.

  • Abia monarch, women back anti-corruption fight

    Abia monarch, women back anti-corruption fight

    Former chairman, Abia State Traditional Rulers’ Council, Eze Isaac Ikonne has reiterated his confidence in the President Muhammadu Buhari administration, urging residents to support the war against corruption.

    The Enyi 1 of Aba was the only traditional ruler in the state who welcomed then candidate Buhari into his palace, conferring him with the title Ogbuagu 1 of Aba.

    That action earned the monarch attacks by his fellow rulers, but he has not relented in his strong belief that the Buhari administration will restore the country’s lost glory.

    Eze Ikonne spoke as members of the President Buhari Grassroots Movement, Abia State Women Wing, visited him.

    He described the war on corruption as a step in the right direction, saying it will help to sanitise the system.

    The leader of the group, Rev. Mrs. Chinedu Nwogwugwu said they support President Buhari because of his sincerity in the anti-corruption fight in addition to his leadership antecedents.

    Lamenting how moneybags and unscrupulous politicians use women during campaigns and dump them thereafter, she urged women to engage in meaningful ventures.

    The women also held a rally at the Eziama Osusu Hall at Faulks Road, Aba, where Nwogwugwu lamented the extent and effects of corruption in the country.

    “It is unfortunate that during campaign and electioneering period, you will see our women going from one place to another and at the end, the politician will give them peanuts that will not be enough to buy even bread for the children and most times after they were elected and sworn into office, they will abandon the people that suffered to campaign for them. We are now being used as object of ridicule in the hands of politicians and that is why we are calling on them (women) to come out and join the president in his fight against corruption which has eaten deep into the economy of the country even more than cancer.”

     

  • Mushroom expert sensitises youths, women

    Mushroom expert sensitises youths, women

    An horticulturist and Senior Lecturer in the Department of Crop and Soil Science, Faculty of Agriculture, University of Port Harcourt, Mrs Olutayo Modupeola Adedokun, has revealed the multi-million dollar benefits of mushroom.

    Mrs Adedokun, who has won awards on account of her efforts in the study and production of mushrooms, said Nigeria could actually make billions in foreign earnings as well as arrested the national food lag by effectively encouraging the production of mushrooms.

    Addressing an audience made up of students and other guests, Adedokun, said she got to know about mushroom cultivation during her Master’s Degree at University of Ibadan, when she was asked to pick mushroom as a case research study. She also did her research in applied mycology- mushroom science technology, cultivation and medicinal mushrooms. She further noted that everything looked really strange and difficult initially, but with the encouragement of her husband, she was able to take on the research with ease.

    She said at the end of the research she realised that it would have been a great mistake if she had refused to accept to research on mushroom. “Today I have a very big farm on mushroom, I supply to some of the hotels in Port Harcourt and outside the state. With the role I played in Agriculture I have been recognized beyond African continent. I was honoured by African Women in Agriculture Research and Development (AWARD). But when I started mushroom cultivation I converted two rooms from our three bedrooms flat.”

    Mrs. Adedokun said mushrooms are macro fungi with characteristics fruiting bodies, which can be picked by hands “Indigenous mushrooms are diverse and found mostly growing on dead woods. They are nutritious, having protein which contains all the essential amino acids. They contain essential vitamins and minerals. They are low in calories, low in sugar, and low in cholesterol and contain good dietary fibers. They are suitable for individuals with disease conditions such as diabetes, hypertension, obesity etc.”

     

  • Women hold global mentoring walk

    Women hold global mentoring walk

    A NON-GOVERNMENTAL Organisation (NGO) Ideas Builders Initiative at the weekend held activities as part of efforts to mark the Global Women Mentoring Walk. The event is held on the third Saturday of November yearly to promote entrepreneurship among women through mentoring.

    In a message, the NGO’s Executive Director Mrs Lucy Kanu said: ‘’As we walk, women engage in discussions regarding life goals, ideas, challenges and successes. It underscores the value of women’s leadership and exemplifies the transformative impact they have when they come together to promote positive change throughout the world.’’

    A mentor Mrs Akpanette Ubong urged women to be driven by the passion for success. Sit down and think and you will be surprised by the ideas that will come your way.  Where you are working, put in your best.’’

    A former staff member of Toyota Nigeria and car dealer, Mrs Ubong said she dreamt of selling cars while in secondary school. She added: ‘’Do what you can, where you are with what you have,’’ saying that sometimes they might get help.

    Dr Funmi Olushoga of Project Think asked the mentees to also think. ‘’Without thinking, you can do nothing. There is thinking before reaction.’’ While Mrs Oluayo Sowemimo, a cosmetologist and teacher, said women could be where they want to be if they have the faith, acquire the right skills. She added: ‘’Be contented with what you have. Don’t give up.’’Also, a farmer and business support professional Mrs Edobong Akpabio said honesty and belief in oneself were vital to entrepreneurship, noting: ‘’Be yourself.’’

  • Anambra women set for silver jubilee

    Anambra State Women Association Lagos (ASWAL), the umbrella body of the state’s women town unions in Lagos State, will on November 21 celebrate its silver jubilee at the Teslim Balogun Stadium Surulere, Lagos.

    The celebration will be memorable, said the president of the association, Dr Nkiruka Ifekwem, a lecturer, public analyst and gender activist.

    She said, “It is going to be a day like never before as we have put in place activities that would keep the people asking for more. All Anambra women town unions in Lagos, numbering 177 with membership strength of over 7,000 women, are expected to bring their various cultural dances to perform at the event. There will be a cooking competition where Igbo traditional delicacies will be exhibited. Motivational talks will be delivered to empower women. Many corporate bodies are sponsoring this and they are coming with presents for the women.”

    In its 25 years of existence, she said the association has “worked assiduously towards achieving a better life for Anambra women in Lagos. It  has been empowering Anambra women in Lagos economically through seminars, workshops, and provision of seed capital to boost their businesses. Our economic empowerment programmes go a long way in alleviating poverty among our members.

    “Besides, there has been mentoring programmes for  the women and we have had trainings on parenting, health issues and even on political sensitisation. We have also trained Anambra women on how to create a balance between their work and home as most of them are either career or business women. Last December we collaborated with Anambra State women in the United States of America to have a cancer walk in Awka to sensitise the women on the ravaging disease. During the last election period we trained the women to be politically sensitized, vote any candidate of their choice wisely without being compromised.”

    With the benefit of hindsight, she said: “The association came into existence at a time when the present-day Enugu State and part of today’s Ebonyi State were still in Anambra State. But even after Enugu was carved out of Anambra State, the association has continued to grow from strength to strength, recording great successes in women empowerment.

    It is in the spirit of these noble achievements that the association plans to celebrate its silver jubilee in a grand style.”

    She advised women to try to maximise their potentials, adding: “They should be focused and deviate from all those stereotypes attached to women. Women should note that no one can make you feel inferior without your permission. And to men, I say, ‘women are not seeking equality but equity, please allow women to maximise their potentials.”

    The grand occasion is expected to be graced by the first lady of Anambra State, Ebelechukwu Obiano, who will be the chief host. Other key personalities expected at the event include the senators representing the three senatorial zones of Anambra State, two of whom, incidentally, are women, Senator Uche Ekwunife and Senator Stella Odua and Senator Andy Uba.