Tag: women

  • Women get free cancer screening

    Women get free cancer screening

    For two consecutive Fridays in the month of January, over 200 women from Surulere Local Government and its environs gathered at the Optimal Cancer Care Foundation, Bode Thomas Surulere for a free breast and cervical cancer screening exercise. The exercise was organised and sponsored by the Surulere Patriotic Association (PAS), a non-governmental foundation dedicated to meaningful and social development in Surulere Local Government.

    The exercise started with a lecture session where Dr Femi Olaleye, the Medical Director of the Optimal Cancer Care Foundation, took time to educate participants on how cancer could be easily prevented through regular screening to drive caution and prevention. Dr Olaleye said the centre has screened about 10, 000 women in the last one year with 10 percent of the women testing positive to cervical cancer. He, however, added that managing cancer is lot easier when detected early and therefore advised women to invest in their health by attending regular screenings so that they won’t be caught off guard. “Parents should also bring their teenage daughters for cervical cancer screening since any woman who is sexually active is at the risk of getting the Human Papilloma Virus which is present at the genitalia of most men. Those who have reached menopause are not also exempted until they are 65 years old,” he stressed further.

    Mrs Ronke Balogun, a supervisor for women affairs and poverty alleviation in Itire-Ikate LCDA, who participated in the exercise, described it as a good experience and an ample opportunity for grassroots women to be educated since some still believe cancer is caused by juju. Although she confessed to doing her screening for the first time, she admonishes women to invest more in their health not just on Aso ebi only.

    Mr Fuad Laguda, a trustee member of PAS who monitored the exercise on both occasions, pledged continuous support for health and empowerment activities not just for women alone but men and youths in Surulere.

    To add glamour to the event, Ms. Tolu Bewaji of the Ojuelewa Institute led her team to offer free make-over sessions for women who attended the screening.

    Thirty cases of cervical cancer, five casese of breast lumps were discovered during the screening. The secretary of the association, Mr. Megbon Martins said efforts are on the way to reach the ministry of health for medical assistance on these cases.

  • 10,000 women for entrepreneurship training

    10,000 women for entrepreneurship training

    Things are looking up for Plateau State women as the state government has evolved policies and programmes that would enhance their economic well-being. One of these policies is the establishment of micro-finance banks in each of the 17 local government areas.

    This, government said, is aimed at facilitating the financing of small and medium-scale trade for women at the grassroots.

    In the circumstances, 10,000 women will undergo special training to acquire skills on entrepreneurship after which they will be able to access funds from any micro-finance bank in their respective local government areas to enable them to begin small-scale business. The first batch of 1,800 women is already participating in entrepreneurial skill training.

    The programme will be beneficial in the areas of poverty reduction among women, boosting commercial activities in the rural communities as well as enhancing the economic activities of the state.

    The economic package was unveiled at the opening ceremony of entrepreneurial skill acquisition workshop organised by the state government. The women will be trained at the zonal headquarters of the three senatorial zones of the state.

    The project is undertaken in collaboration with Women in Agriculture and Youth Empowerment (WAYE), a foundation established by wife of the Plateau State governor, Ngo Talatu Jang and Fingertips Enterprises Development Partners International Limited (FEDPIL).

    While the Plateau State government provides the funding, the WAYE Foundation is responsible for selecting the women that will participate in the training programme while Fingertips Enterprise Development Partners International Limited (FEDPIL) will provide the resource persons for the entrepreneurship training.

    Addressing the women during the opening ceremony of the workshop held at Rukuba Barack Jos, Managing Director of FEDPIL, Mr. Haggai Gutap said: “The training will promote financial literacy and stimulate the creative imagination, talent and curiosity of the women in pursuit of personal development. It will also broaden women’s access to finance and financial inclusion which will further reduce the incidence of poverty in the state”

    Continuing, Mr. Gutap said: “The workshop is commencing from the Plateau North senatorial zone. 300 participants are expected from each local government of the zone. So, from the six local governments in the Northern zone, I have 1,800 women participating at the workshop. The workshop will last for three days in each zone.

    According to Gutap, the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) had launched a N220 billion Small and Medium- Enterprises Development Fund where 60 per cent of the fund is reserved for women. But how many of the women are eligible to access this fund?

    “This training will, therefore, prepare women on the Plateau to access significant amount of this fund for the growth and development of their respective businesses. This will further enable beneficiaries to be in control of their own businesses and achieve economic independence,” he said.

    Head of Civil Service, Mr. Ezekiel Dalyop said: “Empowerment of rural women is a deliberate policy of government towards wealth creation at the grassroots which will eventually impact positively on the state’s economy.”

    It was gathered that the state government is making arrangements to establish Plateau State Entrepreneurship Development Agency (PLASEDA), which will manage the entrepreneurship industry.

    Also speaking, Interim Administrator of Jos South Local Government Area, Emmanuel Bimtet, said the financial literacy programme is a people-oriented policy of government for rural women. He urged women to take advantage of the scheme as a step towards eradicating poverty.

    At the end of the three-day training, participants were excited about the knowledge they have acquired at the workshop.

    One of the participants, Mrs. Phoebe Shinkur, said she had been equipped with the technique of managing scarce fund and principles of savings.

    Another participant, Mrs. Asabe Gana said: “I have learnt how to maintain good relationship with costumers; I have also learnt how to develop my trade using little fund.”

    Mrs. Ladi Thomas, another participant, told our correspondent that “I now know the principles of financial management. I never knew of this before. I have also learnt about record keeping and financial planning.”

     

  • Day Ugborodo men, women  rejected their leaders

    Day Ugborodo men, women rejected their leaders

    There was palpable tension in Warri, Sapele, Benin City and even Lagos and other towns inhabited by Itsekiri indigenes in the run-up to the gathering of thousands of Ugborodo indigenes from all over the world. The venue was the famous Ikpere Hall at Ode-Ugborodo, the traditional headquarters of Ugborodo community perched on the tips of the Atlantic Ocean in Warri South West Local Government Area of Delta State.

    It was tagged the ‘Mother of all Gatherings’ by some, while others simply said it was the last frontier in the battle to reclaim the oil-rich community from wicked leaders, whose supremacy tussle over the Ugborodo Governing Board, an arm of the influential Ugborodo Trust, had caused so much deaths and suffering.

    On one side of the divide is David Tonwe, a former councillor, former chairman of Warri South West Local Government Area and one-time chair of the Governing Board. His counterpart is Chief Thomas Ereyitomi, his former deputy who won an election into the highest position in the council. Both men, rich in their own rights, have been recurring decimals in the history of the community over the years and they backed by various leaders for various diverse reasons.

    The rivalry between the two groups had led to several deaths and destruction of property which some accounts put at about a billion naira in the past years. The tempo in the bloody beat reached its crescendo on January 4, 2013, when a section in the crisis invaded the town. The incident led to several deaths and wanton destruction of property.

    The fuel for the latest insurgence was the battle by the two sides to reposition for the control of the $16billion Export Processing Zone (EPZ) in the community. The composition of a 21-member committee to interface with the Federal Government had seen both sides flexing their muscles.

    Prior to the gathering of Saturday, February 1, a faction in the crisis had raised the alarm over alleged plan to scuttle the peace deal of the state government. A statement signed by 10 elders, led by Pa Wynne Agba, a former Secretary of the Council of Elders and Sandys Omadeli Uvwoh, among others, alleged that the Tonwe/Dr Alex Ideh faction had concluded plan single-handedly nominate members.

    They insisted that the move was against the decision of the peace committee headed by the Secretary to Delta State Government, Comrade Ovouzorie Macaulay, that each group nominates 10 members each.

    “However, information available to us indicates that the Dr. Alex Ideh/David Tonwe faction in collaboration with some elders in their faction, have concluded plans to hold a meeting in Ode-Ugborodo on Saturday, Febuary 1, 2014, for the purpose of constituting the entire

    21-member Ogidigben (Ugborodo) EPZ Interface Committee envisaged by the peace committee.

    “This is contrary to the directive of the peace committee in Asaba on January 19, 2014, accepted by both factions,” Pa Wynne added.

    The peace deal brokered by the government was against the backdrop of the January bloodbath and fever-pitch tension as the project drew nearer. President Jonathan had waded in and asked the state governor to rein in the crisis before it spiralled out of control. On his own the governor had also made several efforts, but distrust and suspicion over his intention had kept the Tonwe group out of it.

    The Olu of Warri, Ogiame Atuwatse II, visited Governor Uduaghan after the bloodbath and chose Austin Oborogbeyi to chair the 21-committee, leaving 20 that was shared 10/10 among the factions. But even as the Olu was announcing his choice, the community leaders including Pa JOS Ayomike, had slammed the monarch. They particularly criticised his silence over the invasion and death of Ugborodo people.

    It was against this fluid background that hundreds of elders, youths, women and children started streaming from the various communities into Arunton, enroute to Ode-Ugborodo venue of the meeting.

    They came from all over the world – from the state, all over Nigeria, the United Kingdom and the United States of America. Joseph Ayomike, founder of Agura Hotel, one of the foremost hotels in Abuja, Mr Maxwell Okoro, a former Director of the Central Bank of Nigeria, Ete Harriman-Ayida, Moses Ajijala, Edward Okoturo, Patrick Metseagharun and Solomon Iyinboh.

    David Tonwe, Joseph Uwawa and Michael Lodge, the youth leader, were there too, but Tonwe’s counterpart, Thomas Ereyitomi, Ayirimi Emami, Isaac Botosan and other prominent members of that faction were conspicuous by their absence.

    The atmosphere was tensed. Highly charged community youths stood on the beach – there is no jetty – awaiting the arrival of guests. They insisted that all the guests disembarked on the beach, as they (youths) usually do, and make the long journey through Arunton through the sandy path to the Ikpere hall located at the end of the community.

    This reporter was one of those who made that long journey. On the way, he passed the Eghare-Aja Wellington Ojogor, Mama Ayuwe and other prominent leaders of the community. Weighed down by age, Eghare Ojogor’s steps were shorter and visibly more painful. But he made the journey.

    At the town hall, already seated was the Olaja-Orori Benson ‘Dube’ Omadeli, dressed in impeccable white long sleeve traditional shirt over a red ‘single’ wrapper. On his head he tied his customary headgear – a somewhat off-colour peach/purple damask headscarf.

    The spiritual head did not enter the town hall. He sat under a canopy mounted outside at a vantage position from where he could see through the sea of people to the podium where Eghare Ojogor and other leaders sat. His face was deadpan.

    When the meeting started, Omadeli sprang to life; his voice rang out, cutting through the crowd and reaching the podium and the throng of people either standing or seating outside the hall. He told them that the purpose of the meeting was to deliberate on happenings in the community over the past weeks, including his arrest and allegation of illegal bunkering and attempted murder levelled against him and the trio of Michael Lodge (aka Ukpede), Joseph Uwawa (Logbemi) and Churchill Omadeli.

    In moving speech punctuate by the shout of ‘heart of God move them, hand of God move them’ and chants of ‘end of our sufferings’, the Olaja-Orori, showed his apparent ease with the Itsekiri language as he expressed the gratitude of the Ugborodo people to the Federal Government for the proposed EPZ.

    He said, “We are here for the progress of the EPZ; whatever assistance we can offer, we will. We have been tagged troublemakers, but we are not. We must comport ourselves like trained and educated people.”

    The meeting reached boiling point when the issue of the acquisition of land for the project came up for debate. They were vehement in the expression of displeasure over the handling of the project thus far and condemnation of the performance of the Trust.

    Speakers, including Ayon Gbesin Asin, Wilson Akperi, Boyo Iyinboh, Anunu Uwawa, Michael Rowaino, Oludewa Oritsedumi, Anderson Ebiekutan and Moses Ajijala said the leadership of the Trust over the years had betrayed their trusts.

    Akperi was particularly aggrieved that while the communities of their Ijaw counterparts were fast developing because of proper management of their resources, Ugborodo community was decaying.

    “As the Ijaws are empowered that is how our Itsekiri sons and daughters are also empowered. But look at our communities; look at the hall where we are holding this meeting today!”

    For his part, Iyinboh said, “Our (Ugborodo) enemies are within us. We have been too patient when we know our fund is being looted and did not chase out our oppressors. Our people must benefit from the goodness in our land.”

    Anunu Uwawa lamented that some of the leaders who were in position to share the benefits reportedly told those who got the jobs slots allotted to the community that “The job is not for them to buy cars or build houses, but to feed themselves. This means they want to keep the people in perpetual slavery, where they live from hand to mouth.”

    As various leaders from Ijalla, Atunton, Ogidigben, Madangho and Ajudaibo spoke, they were greeted with cries of ‘Uya otanren ooo”. And by the time the microphone returned to the Agbebijo it was clear that a no-confidence vote would succeed against Tonwe and Ereyitomi.

    When Omadeli asked what to do with the failed leaders, the crowd was unanimous in their shout of “away with them”.

    Consequently, the Olaja-Orori pronounced the sack of the two factional leaders and dissolved every other structure in the community. He said neither Tonwe nor Ereyitomi or any other individual, group and institution were competent to speak on behalf of the community or represent it whatever capacity.

    “The traditional leadership structure of Ugborodo as encapsulated in the offices of Olaja-Orori, Eghare-Aja and the Registered Trustee has henceforth been given full mandate to handle all issues affecting the Ugborodo Community; including issues relating to the siting of the EPZ in Ugborodo.

    “Furthermore, the Assembly called on governments, agencies, companies and the general public to henceforth discountenance any correspondence, publication and meeting that are not entered into and signed by the trio of the Olaja Orori, Dube Omadeli, Eghare Wellington Ojogor and the Registered Trustee of the Community’ Trust, Pa Eworitse Tsebi,” he added.

    He warned that all communications on the letterhead of the community would only the signed by the listed trio and advised government agencies, companies and other bodies operating in the area to be mindful of the antics of “impostors who would want to use the letterhead to hoodwink them.”

    In his response, Tonwe, promised to abide by the resolution of the assembly. “The owners of the community say they do not want any faction again; they have dissolved all factions and taken over the leadership of the community.”

    Not unexpectedly, Thomas Ereyitomi, in his reaction described the outcome of the assembly as null and void. He said his group knew the plot and purpose of the meeting, stressing that was what informed the press conference of two days earlier.

    He said, “The decision of that meeting cannot be binding because it was a sectional meeting. They are only trying to give it a semblance of generality by calling it whatever name they choose. It is like us holding our own meeting and saying anything. We cannot say it is a meeting of the entire Ugborodo. That is not done.

    “If they say there is no faction, then they should be able to say what has led to the crisis in the community. Besides, those who attended the meeting partook in the peace meeting where the decision to nominate 10 members each was taken, they cannot attend the meeting and then go back and say the decision is not binding on them,” Ereyitomi said in a telephone chat with our reporter.

     

  • WOMEN LEAGUE CONGRESS: NFF drags stakeholders to Kogi

    WOMEN LEAGUE CONGRESS: NFF drags stakeholders to Kogi

    The 2013 Nigeria Women Football League Congress will hold today in Lokoja, Kogi State. The congress, which would herald the draws of the 2014 Nigeria Women Football Premier League, will be declared opened by Kogi State Governor, Captain Idris Wada. The Congress was supposed to be held on February 1, but was shifted due to the participation of the Super Eagles in the 2014 Africa Nations Championship (CHAN) in South Africa.

    According to the Chairman of the Nigeria Women Football League Mrs Dilichukwu Onyedinma, who spoke in Lokoja on Wednesday “all is now set for the Congress of the Nigeria Women Football League, which is the highest decision making body of the League, and the Congress is expected to ratify all our activities for the year new football season. We would also hold draws of the Nigeria Women Football Premier League which is the first in Africa. All the League clubs (24) of them are members of the Congress and they would expect us to give them comprehensive reports on how the League was run last football season, and the proposal for the new football season would also be approved. The Executive Governor of Kogi State, Captain Idris Wada is expected to declare the Congress open, and he would be accompanied by his wife. The chief host will be the President of the Nigeria Football Federation, Aminu Maigari, who would lead members of the Executive Board of the Federation to the Congress. The day will be rounded up with Champion of Champions football match between Nasarawa Amazons of Lafia and Rivers Angels of Port Harcourt. The match would be played at the ultra modern Confluence Stadium in Lokoja”.

    Mrs. Onyedinma, who is an Executive Board member of the NFF said: “We would not stop to be appreciative to His Excellency, Governor of Kogi State, Captain Idris Wada for supporting us to hold the Congress in his state. This has really shown that his love for sports is all embracing. We thank him very much. I am optimistic that the New Year would be better for Women football in the country.

  • Women urged to be agents of change

    Women urged to be agents of change

    The Awesome Treasures Foundation, a non-governmental organisation held its first summit of the year at the weekend. The event featured women from across the country who gathered at the Shell Hall of the Muson Centre, Onikan, Lagos, to get inspiration from each other and also to pray their way into the New Year.

    They were women from all over the Southsouth and Southwest regions of the country, who were encouraged to have the courage to pursue their dreams, even while raising transformational leaders.

    The quarterly event, which began six-years ago, has been one of the numerous gatherings of women, with a bid to have positive impacts on their families and society. The meeting is now a platform for women to contribute their quota to the the development of the country. It was an avenue for them to join other people of faith in prayer to secure new heights of greatness in the year.

    The theme for the January summit was “Metamorphosis II: Becoming all you are born to be.” It was done in partnership with cosmetics giant L’Oreal West Africa.

    Convener/founder of the foundation, Mrs Jumoke Adenowo admonished women to always profitably apply knowledge, which has been known to always be the secret of victory. The women were told that they are the only ones who can either make or break the year.

    To her, being female is not a disease, thus the need to rise about the disadvantage, focus on what we want to do and see ourselves as agents of change.

    “We must take personal responsibility for our own successes and for ourselves; that is the message for the beginning of this year.

    Awesome treasures have over the years supported initiatives by empowering women who are abused or less privileged in the society.

    “There is so much, things are going the way we want it to go finally. The women are taken initiative and doing things themselves. More and more, it is informing of vivid leaders who are doing something on their own individual platform to make things happen. The things we do are just to set examples to our women to go and do likewise in communities around them.

    Present were the General Manager of the Consumer Products Division of L’Oreal West Africa, Mr Sekou Coulibaly. Other prominent Nigerians who have graced the foundation’s meetings are Ekiti State Governor Kayode Fayemi; First Lady of Lagos Dame Abimbola Fashola and former Deputy Governor Princess Sarah Sosan among other women from all walks of life.

    Awesome Treasures also partners with women in Nollywood and popular figures in the society to reach to those in the grassroots.

    The foundation has employed tools of advocacy and intervention to help Nigerians achieve their Millennium Development Goals (MDG) by assisting in the socio-economic growth of the people.

    The next summit will hold on April 5.

     

  • Lawyers seek to empower women

    Former Third Vice-President of the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) Dr Ogugua Ikpeze and Co-Chair, International Bar Association (IBA) African Regional Forum, Mrs Olufunmi Oluyede have launched an empowerment programme to advance the personal development of women.

    The initiative, Women Empowerment Now (WEN), is an international programme that promotes the advancement of women, strengthening their abilities and helping them achieve balance among their personal, family and professional lives.

    At a briefing in Lagos, WEN Co-President, Beatriz Martorello, an international arbitrator and mediator, said the programme aims to reach the highest number of women possible and strengthen them regardless of their professional development and achievements.

    Among other objectives is to share powerful and inspirational experiences, and create specific programmes to meet the particular needs of women in reach region.

    WEN Vice-President Aaron Schildhaus, an international business lawyer, said the initiative would reach women through conferences in different cities and countries.

    “WEN is presenting a special series of conferences geared to the complexity of the female world. We discuss a variety of topics, such as women’s leadership, women’s needs, women’s strengths, success, among others.

    “WEN’s audience is both sexes. Men are more than welcome to learn of women’s realities today, and to support and contribute to the essential dialogue, helping women to advance,” he said.

    Ikpeze said the initiative is about human development. “We’re so used to ‘cash’ development, but WEN is about giving people fish, but teaching you how to catch the fish, and not just to feed yourself, but to feed others around you. That’s the target.

    “There is a paradigm shift already. In most women empowerment initiatives, you see basically only women. But WEN is about men too. We want to drive this initiative as a family. In each country, WEN identifies needs. The need in America may not be the need in Nigeria.”

    Mrs Oluyede said the target audience cuts across the learned and the illiterate, and that effort would be made to carry everyone along. Her law office in Lagos, TRLP Law, will serve as a liaison, she said.

    “We’ll ensure that the sky will not be the limit when it comes to what we want to do to empower women,” Oluyede said.

     

     

  • Cancer treatment machine for women

    Help came the way of women in the Federal Capital Territory who are suffering from cancer, as the Society for Family Health (SFH) donated a Cryotherapy- a machine used for the treatment of pre-cancerous lesion of the cervix to Saffon Hospital, located in Nyanya a satellite town in the Federal Capital Territory (FCT).

    Society for Family Health also donated equipment for the testing of cervical cancer in over 10 hospitals spread across the capital city.

    Cervical cancer is said to be the second most common cancer among women in Nigeria after breast cancer. About 9,659 women in Nigeria are reported to die of cervical cancer annually.

    Speaking with journalists after presenting the machine to the management of the hospital, the President Board of Trustees of the SFH, Prof. Shima Gyoh said: “Cancer normally increases with age and I will say that women who are 40 years and above are more at risk than the younger ones, but it can occur at any age. It does not follow any pattern. It just happens that it is commoner in older women.

    “We want to stress that this machine is not for treating cancer of the cervix. We have discovered that cancer of the cervix is caused by a virus and anytime that virus infects a woman, it may be there for several years before the cancer manifests.

    “If we can find out that the virus is there before it causes cancer, we want to kill it. This is what the machine is about.

    “So, this machine is about normal women who have no trouble at all coming for test and if the virus is found, the virus is killed before it stays long enough to cause any trouble.”

    Gyoh, however, advised the Federal Government to purchase such machines for use in all public hospitals in the country.

    “This machine costs only 3,000 dollars and it should really be present in every hospital and clinic in Nigeria. Nigeria can afford it, if we put our priorities right,” he stressed.

    Earlier, the Managing Director of SFH, Sir Bright Ekweremadu, said the SFH has, through its social franchise system, partnered with over 300 private health facilities for the provision of quality healthcare services that are accessible and affordable, especially to the poor and vulnerable in the society.

    He urged women to “avail themselves of this wonderful privilege of being screened for cervical cancer and if positive, at the early stage, to come in for cryotherapy here at Saffon Hospital.”

  • Women group donates to hospital

    The women wing of the Edo National Association (ENA) based in the United States has donated some medical equipment worth millions of naira to the female ward at the Central Hospital, Benin City.

    Women Affair Coordinator of ENA, Mrs. Esther Thompson, who donated the equipment said the gesture was to compliment the efforts of the Edo State government.

    Mrs. Thompson stated that ENA understands that the state government could not do everything alone hence their resolve tp give back to the society.

    According to her, “We want to give back to the society we came from. We want to put smiles on the faces of our people especially the less privileged”.

    Items donated include a suction machine, steriliser, blood pressure machine, stethoscope and a refrigerator.

    She called on successful Nigerians in the diaspora to give succour to less privileged in the country.

    Medical Director of the hospital, Dr Edith Kayode-Iyasere thanked the association for the donation and added that equipment would go along way to meeting medical needs of patients in the hospital.

     

  • Why women sometimes act tough against men—Interior décor expert  Oluwadamilola Akinsete

    Why women sometimes act tough against men—Interior décor expert Oluwadamilola Akinsete

    FOR Lagos-based accountant-turned furniture maker and interior decorator, Oluwadamilola Akinsete, last year was a good year. As the Chief Executive Officer of ‘Home Inspiration,’ she successfully moved into a bigger, posh showroom from the Mainland area to the heart of Victoria Island where her upper class clientele dwell. The commissioning was indeed a big society event. However, just as the year was dimming out, her father passed on at a ripe old age. We met her in deep preparation for the upcoming burial. But she still found time to tell us about the lifestyle that turned her into a Lagos celebrity and successful businesswoman.

    Recently you re-located from the Mainland to the Island. What prompted this?

    The truth is that our new showroom was ready for us to move into much earlier than 2013. But it took some time to perfect everything here. It was when it was totally ready that we commissioned it at the end of 2013. What inspired me to move big to the Island was the need to have a flagship showroom. If you are doing a good business for over two decades, then you would have come of age. We needed to stand apart in a unique way. Even within this short period we have moved here, I can see that we have started adding value. It is an opportunity for people in Victoria Island to have one stop place for furniture and interior decorations.

    You sell high profile furniture and home products to the rich, what is your perception of the taste of the rich?

    Anybody who walks into our showrooms as far as I am concerned is a high profile person. I respect my customers. However, what I have been able to learn is that anybody who comes your way is not a coincidence. So you make the best of everybody that comes your way. Human beings are rich in one thing or another. Like I said earlier, when you pay attention to the rich, when you have their interest in mind and they know it, you enjoy them. However, human beings are human beings, rich or poor.

    Can you describe yourself?

    I want to believe that I am very gold-driven, very hardworking and focused. I am also non-diplomatic. Though I do not know if that is complimentary, especially in this part of the world where we have our culture and all that. But what I know is that I am blunt, straight and I just say it as it is.

    Would you say your early life influenced the person that you are today?

    I have only one parent left now, my father died recently. I had parents who were diligently strict; they had a lot of integrity and very hard working. At an early age, my siblings and I learnt the value of hard work. When I became an adult, my early years taught me a lot about life, which I also applied in business. In business, for instance, you need a lot of discipline, you need a lot of integrity and you need to be very hardworking. These are the values that my parents inculcated in me at a very young age. My primary school was at Maryland Convent, while my secondary school education was at Federal Government College, Ilorin, Kwara State. I studied Accountancy at the University of Ife (now Obafemi Awolowo University).

    One notices that you are also simple in nature

    Oh, that is me. I don’t put on unnecessary airs. When you are a Christian, you find out that you do not attach too much importance to this world; more so when you realise that there is not really much in this world. We will leave at some point in time. And when we do, we will equally leave everything behind to return to our maker.

    As a young girl, what were the dreams that you had about the future?

    Now that I have to think of it, I cannot really remember whether I had dreams of becoming this or that in future. But I know that as a girl then, I wanted to finish school quickly and then go into business. I attended a boarding school in Ilorin. It was tough. I wanted to complete school quickly and leave. Though I realised later that attending boarding school was good. It toughens you, instils discipline and hard work in students. You wake up in the morning to face morning duties, which you have to do before going to the classes. You have to bathe with cold water in harmattan. That training helped. But then, we were mostly complaining that the authorities there were wicked and hash. But we’ve found out later in life that it was for our own good.

    The choice of studying Accountancy, whose idea was it?

    That idea was from my dad. He kept at it; he said I must do a professional course; that I must be a doctor or lawyer. Well, I didn’t want to be a doctor. I didn’t want to be a lawyer too because I knew that I didn’t want to be reading for the rest of my life. Somehow, I knew that lawyers read endlessly. Accounting did not look bad after all. I had always been good with figures. To appease him, I studied Accounting. I enjoyed it. I am also still doing Accountancy now because it helps me in business.

    If you were not an accountant, what else would you have loved to be doing?

    I really do not know. Perhaps I would have just stuck to business. I knew that I would be an entrepreneur.

    What motivated you into setting out in business?

    I guess what prompted me into business was the need to be an entrepreneur. I had the need to add value to the nation, to my family and to myself. There was also the need to develop the creativity that God had already deposited in me; and the need to earn a living, which was also very important. I started out the business even before I graduated from the university. I started with soft cushions and curtains. I guess I must have had some sort of divine guidance. I never sat down and thought or planned to be an interior decorator. It was not a well thought out plan at all. It was something that just evolved on its own way back in 1993. I started playing with the idea when I was in the university. I knew I didn’t want to go into paid employment. I wanted to do something on my own. My late dad was a businessman. He was into transportation; he was running haulage business. He used to have trailers that did haulage business with African Paints, Cadbury and other organisations.

    So I wanted to be like that. I wanted to be like him. I think that must have influenced me somehow to be an entrepreneur. Incidentally, my parents had five of us, but the rest are in paid employment. I am the only one that is in business as an entrepreneur. So maybe I took after my dad in that respect.

    How did the early millions roll in for you?

    I was always living in Lagos with my parents. Though I went to school from time to time and came back. Before I finished school, I had already had the mind-set of being an entrepreneur. Immediately after the university, I returned to Lagos. I didn’t get an office, so I operated from home. I was doing something that I enjoyed and for which I had a passion. So it was natural for me to keep at it. That was how I got better in what I was doing. I have been blessed with good clients, some who have been with us for as long as 15 years. Some Nigerians are very good. When they see that from your heart that you can perceive what is good for them, and that you have their interest in mind, you will enjoy them.

    What makes you happy?

    My work makes me happy. I am happy because I am contributing my quota to the society. I am happy knowing that I am making this world better than the way I met it in my own way. I am employing people, training and re-training them. I counsel them too. I push them to be better. I am also happy knowing that people are earning a living from this organisation, not only the direct staff but also the indirect staff, the contractors and the sub-contractors. These are what make me happy.

    As a woman entrepreneur, how do you cope with your home, hectic work schedule and the business environment?

    I balance all sides. Women are naturally good at handling multi tasks. God gave us that gift so nobody should boast about it. It is a natural gift from God. Women are capable of doing many things at the same time. So with such a natural gift from God and the wealth of experience built over the years, I have been able to be organised and get all aspects of my life working and balanced.

    What does success mean to you?

    Success to me means being close to God. I know that there is no success without God. Success means relying on Him and being close to Him. After that, you have to be focused. Don’t be engaged in idle things or frolicking about the whole place. Success means being attentive and facing the important things. Lastly you have to believe that one person can change the world. If a person is able to impact values in children, youths, relations or the environment, then that person is successful. The person has prepared a better world than he or she met it. You can change the world through one person at a time.

    As a successful woman, how do you relate to women?

    I don’t see or relate to women in terms of what they have or which business or which role you play. Everybody’s gift is different. If a woman does not do business, she could be a career woman or a home maker or housewife as they are called here. All these are wonderful. Everybody has a part to play. For some women, the role or assignment that God has given them is to take care of the home and it is perfect. For some women it is career, while some other women, it is business. Nobody is better than the other. You have to realise the purpose and role that God has given you. When you do this, you’ll find out that you will be excelling in whatever you do. You cannot say that because you are into business and doing well so you are better than the career person. No, it is not like that. And you cannot say that because you are a home maker, then you are better than the career woman. No, I do not see life that way. We are all important and playing our different roles. There are actually men who tell their wives not to go into paid employment or even do any income paying work. If that is what a woman agrees with the husband, it is all well and good.

    Do you find time despite your executive work schedule to pay attention to ladies’ affairs such as fashion and attending to kitchen matters?

    Every woman must know how to cook. I love cooking. I cook regularly. I enjoy it. I do not have any problem with cooking at all. As for fashion, I love looking good. Every woman should look decent, especially when you interact with people every day.

    And what kind of food do you enjoy most?

    That will be rice and dodo (fried plantain). That seems to be what we mostly eat these days.

    What fashion accessories would you not do without?

    Forget it. There is nothing that I cannot do without! My fashion sense urges me to look simple and comfortable. In doing that, I do not need to break the bank. God has blessed us with our Ankara material right now, so every woman can wear it and be simple and comfortable without breaking the bank. I like pink colour. I wear pink. When I have cause to wear fashion accessories, I choose whatever suits the occasion.

    What does glamour mean to you and when should a woman be glamorous?

    When I see very glamorous women, they look good to me. Any woman can look glamorous especially if he has the time and resources to do so. To be glamorous is good. For some women, that is what their husbands like. For some other women, it is not what their husbands want. Such women just love being glamorous. They love looking that way. So my advice is that if you can afford it, and you have the time, be glamorous.

    What do you value most?

    It is God. I value most my relationship with God.

    Was getting up the business ladder easy for you?

    I can tell you that all through the years, it has not been easy for us, but then, God has been good. Nigeria can be quite challenging but God’s grace has been sufficient for us. My first shop was on Allen Avenue in Ikeja, Lagos. But even as I speak to you now, some challenges are still there. In fact, some challenges even grew with time. They became more than before. For instance, the problem of non-availability of power, a few years ago, you could predict when you might have power. That was because the light was stable for some hours of the day. But over time, it became very irregular. Now we just stay on generator. The more you pay the light bill, the less you see the light. We have the burden of paying double taxation. Then also, there is the mass craze for wealth which was not there before. So many people come looking for employment. But as soon as you give them the employment, they do not want the work again. All they want is the money. They do not want to work for the money. All they are targeting is to make money. And life does not work that way. You have to strive. You have to work hard to make money. So the staff do not stay. Once they find out that they cannot make the money instantly, they leave. So you end up training one set of people after another. There is this craze for wealth among our youths, which was not there 10 years ago.

    How has your training influenced your staff?

    It is the ones that are ready to be influenced that get influenced positively. The truth is that we are having a big issue here in Nigeria. I don’t know whether the failure is from the home. Our generation was different. Our generation had strict parents. I think it is different today. Today’s parents are lax. Most of the youth that come for training do not even see it as such. Some are level-headed and reasonable to know that it is for their good. But some have mostly been spoilt from home. In those days, it was different. Children had the fear that their parents must not get to hear that they are involved in any bad conduct. You dare not be reported for bad conduct. This issue has become a major problem in our society. It could be as a result of people now making more money; they are over-indulging their children.

    It is unfortunate that we actually saw this happen in Europe and America. The challenges they are having over there with the youth is because children were not disciplined. We saw it and we have been imbibing the same foreign culture. So the same thing that has been causing a problem in Europe is happening here now.

    When you are under severe pressure, what keeps you going?

    I hope I am not sounding like a cliché; the truth is that it is God that keeps me going. When I am down, I read the scriptures or I go to church to hear an inspiring sermon. God knows when you are down. He knows when you are at the low ebb. He could send a word at that time to you. The sermon in church could be about what you are going through. From there, you draw inspiration to apply to your situation. That is how I find encouragement to move ahead.

    Were you a tomboy as a little girl?

    Yes, I was (laughs). I was the only girl among four boys. I was a real tomboy. I used to climb trees, exchange blows with the boys. I also used to roll on the ground with them. I kicked like they did and jumped on trees. I even had so many scars on my legs as proof for my early lifestyle. You know, boys could be so rough. They most often want to show you that they are stronger and I would want to show, for instance, that I am older.

    How does that affect the way you relate with men now that you are in business?

    Sometimes it’s still a running battle. You find men who think ‘she is a woman’, so they can do that or do this with her. That is why women seem to act tough because most of the time as a woman, you need to prove yourself twice as much. When a woman talks to a man, some men sneer that she is shouting. Their attitude towards a woman in power is somehow. However, in daily business life, I come across gentlemen who are truly gentlemen. At the same time, I still do come across the other type who thinks ‘she is a woman.’

    How do you spend your leisure?

    I rest. I completely shut down and rest to recharge my internal battery. I love good sleep. I put my phones on silent mode and take time off to sleep. Even three hours of good sleep could be very worthwhile.

    Women and make-up go together. Or what do you think?

    I am neither here nor there regarding that. Some women are so beautiful that they don’t need it. But there are also some other women that make up enhances. So I am indifferent to make up. Sometimes it depends on where one is. Actually, some days I use it, some days I do not. There are many days that I don’t.

    Are you hoping to be a minister in the church some day?

    I don t think so (laughs). Not an ordained minister. But I know that wherever we are, in our own ways, we are ministers too.

  • Commissioner’s wife showers women with gifts

    Commissioner’s wife showers women with gifts

    The wife of Akwa Ibom State Commissioner for Information and Communications, Mrs. Maureen Umanah, hosted women from Abak, Etim Ekpo and Ika Federal Constituency, to a Christmas celebration at her residence in Abak.

    The event was attended women political leaders from the three local government areas.

    Mrs. Umanah donated food items, including bags of rice and cash to the women, in appreciation for their steadfast support to Governor Godswill Akpabio and his wife, Ekaete, whom she described as her mother and role model.

    She said she was inspired by the leadership qualities of the Governor and decided to emulate him by gathering women of her constituency to extend her love and care to them in the spirit of Christmas.

    Mrs Umanah advised her fellow women, who are occupying positions of authority to borrow a leaf from the wife of the State Governor, Mrs Ekaete Unoma Akpabio, and use their good offices to promote the welfare of women, especially the widows.

    She also lauded Governor Akpabio for extending his transformation programme to her hometown, Abak, as witnessed in the areas of construction of schools and bridges as well as provision of good road network, linking the city with neighbouring local government areas.

    She acknowledged the fervent prayers from the women of Abak, Etim Ekpo and Ika Federal Constituency to the success of the present administration and solicited their continued cooperation for the government to deliver more dividends of democracy to the citizenry.

    Apart from presenting the gifts, Mrs Umanah also took time to sing and dance with the women.

    The donation was in the categories of widows and other women from each of the three local government areas.

    Some of the beneficiaries described the philanthropic gesture by the wife of the Information Commissioner as the first of its kind in the political history of Abak, Etim Ekpo, Ika Federal Constituency.

    The Assistant Financial Secretary of the Peoples Democratic Party, Mrs Victoria Ime Thomas, described Mrs. Umanah as a caring mother and sister, who has set a pace for other wives of government’s officials to follow.

    For the PDP Woman Leader in Essien Udim, Mrs. Rosemary Anthony Umo, the Christmas gifts have further motivated women and reaffirmed their belief that they have a caring Commissioner and wife, who have the interests of women at heart.

    On her part, the Woman Leader in Etim Ekpo, Mrs Obon-odo Ini Uko, eulogized Mrs Umanah for remembering women, stressing that they will forever remain grateful to her and her husband.

    Another beneficiary was the Party Woman Leader in Abak, Mrs. Mercy Isonguyio. In her appreciation, she emphasised the need for women to always unite and support political and elective office holders for them to succeed.