Tag: youths

  • NDE ‘empowers 50 youths in Imo’

    The Director-General, National Directorate of Employment (NDE), Mallam Mohammed Abubakar, has said 50 youths from Imo State have been empowered by the NDE through the provision of skills and equipment to ensure they are self-reliant.

    He spoke while presenting resettlement items to the youths at the weekend at Enyiato Development Centre, Enyiogugu in Aboh Mbaise Local Government Area of the state.

    The equipment include generating sets, hair drying machines, cooking gas, sets of kitchen utensils, decoration chairs, and satellite dish installation equipment.

    Mohammed, who was represented by the State Director of the NDE, Engineer Jaja Isichei, said  the step was part of government’s efforts at reducing unemployment in the country by empowering the youths.

    He said the beneficiaries were trained in various skills ranging from hair dressing, confectionaries, decorations, satellite dish installation and tiling under the community based training and resettlement scheme of the directorate.

  • Buhari promises Igbo youths one million jobs

    Buhari promises Igbo youths one million jobs

    The presidential candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC), General Muhammadu Buhari, has promised to create one million jobs for Igbo youths by revamping coal deposits in Enugu State for the generation of electricity and for export.

    He spoke at the weekend at the Enugu West APC zonal rally at Orie Awgu Market in Awgu Local Government.

    The presidential hopeful, who was represented by the state Chairman of the APC Presidential Campaign Committee, Mr. Osita Okechukwu, said coal would be revamped to generate electricity to serve the Southeast and boost its economy.

    He promised to award the contract immediately he was sworn in, to avoid the mistakes of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), which squandered the over N2 billion voted for 3D Seismic Study for coal to power project, between 2012 and last year.

    Gen. Buhari said: “We are banking on huge coal deposits at Amasiodo, Inyi and Leje axes of Enugu coal belt. We will award contract for the mining and construction of coal-fired-power-plant.

    “We believe coal is the most abundant fossil fuel in Enugu State and Enugu coal is one of the most qualitative coal brands in the world, which means while some are used to generate electricity, some will be exported.

    My objective is to create one million jobs directly and indirectly, from the coal project, as ancillary projects will follow.

    “I want to emulate the Taichung Coal-Fired-Power-Plant in Taiwan, the largest coal power station in the world. Coal supplies 46 per cent electricity in the United States and over 60 per cent electricity in China. It is callous to abandon such a golden treasury.”

    The Vice Chairman, APC Enugu East, Anike Nwoga, said he hoped that Gen. Buhari would win the election.

    He urged those who attended the rally to be part of the victory party by voting for him.

    Said he: “Many of you are Catholics. Did you hear what Rev. Fr. Ejike Mbaka said? Every patriot must vote for APC. If you go to the North, people in the region are supporting him. People in the Southwest are also poised to vote for Gen. Buhari.”

    At the campaign, three senatorial candidates from other parties endorsed the APC standard-bearer as their candidate.

    They are Chukwu Ijeoma of the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA), Mabel Onwukwe of the Labour Party (LP) and Nwabuike Oliver of the Advanced Congress of Democrats.

    Others at the rally were the Chairman, APC Enugu West, A.C. Ude, Director General of Buhari Campaign Organisation in Enugu State, Ejike Eze and the APC senatorial candidate in Enugu West, Luoisa Achieze.

  • Advice to Nigerian youths

    Dear Nigerian youths,

    This letter was first written to you over a year ago. It is being addressed to you again today through this medium for an obvious reason. Nigerians of my age and beyond (60+) never had cause to be so addressed when we were like you because the situation that warrants the writing of this letter never arose in our youth days. Let it be known to you that except life and sound health, none of Allah’s bounties to man is as treasure-able as youthfulness. The definition of youth varies from place to place and from faith to faith. But generally, youthfulness spans from the age of puberty (at 16) to that of reasoning (at 40).

    That is the second stage of human life as it follows that of adolescence. It can be said therefore that the juiciest part of human life is what people call youth. And whoever is blessed with it is blessed with all hopes of life.

    Youthfulness is the spur of ambition and risk. It is the period of determination and resolution. It encourages attraction between genders and engenders association across ethnic and religious boundaries. All efforts in human life that yield results in old age are made at youthful age. To an average youth anywhere in the world, the sky is never the limit. There are still many other firmaments beyond the sky.

    Youth is the stage of hard work. It is the stage of planning. It is the stage of vision and mission. That is why the youths of any nation are seen as the bone marrow of such a nation and the beacons of the future. And fortunately, youths invariably constitute majority of the existing people at any given time in any given nation.

     

    The youth before now

    In the years past when life had meaning and culture had value, youths were seen as the pride of the nation. They were the natural arrows fixed to the parental bows which were often used to shoot through the iron gate of life. This was the case in Nigeria before and during the colonial era. And after the country’s independence, the youths constituted the glory and hope of their parents. Their role in the family encouraged the bearing of many children as they partnered with their fathers in tilling the farm lands and in harvesting the crops.

    In short, they formed the live wire of their families. When a father was said to be rich in those days, it was only because he had many children (male and female) who constituted the workforce of the family. The father’s pride then was not just the number of children he had but the volume of contribution made by those children to his wealth. Thus, children were considered as wealth.

    In those days, youths were not just helpers of their parents on the farms or in their trades they also assisted them in training the younger ones. Yet, they had the highest regards for those parents in their utterances and in their conduct. The level of discipline in those days was such that boys were handled by their fathers while girls were mostly handled by their mothers. And the mothers dared not utter a word while any child was being subjected to discipline by the father. In a nutshell the upbringing of a child was the main key to societal serenity.

     

    Change of trend

    Today, Nigeria is a different story altogether. The youth of yesteryear have become the elders of today. They have left the chord of discipline that escorted them into the world of decency to the new train of indecency. And that chord is no longer suitable for either today or tomorrow as the trend has changed dramatically. The current trend began in January 1966 when some uncultured youths in military uniform, spurred by blind youthful ambition, threw the value of age and experience to the winds and killed the then leaders of the Nigerian nation in what was called a military coup d’état. By that unfortunate act they plunged the nation into a precipitate civil war that rendered the youth wild and eroded the value of youthfulness.

    For 13 years thereafter, the vagabonds remained in power using whim in place of experience. And when a brief civilian interlude came on board in 1979 for only four years, the vagabonds perched on the governance again and like hungry vultures, they fed on the carcass of democracy to their fill. Through that unbridled usurpation of power, the so-called Nigerian military weaned themselves from the ladle of integrity and destroyed whatever was left of their nomenclature.

    Here we are today, looking desperately like a starved hawk and hanging restlessly in the balance like a gagged hyena. Virtually every Nigerian has forgotten the real cause of our calamity. The cry everywhere is now about the effect of that calamity on the nation. No one endeavours to look back and see where the downfall started from.

    And without looking back, there can never be any correction as to how to rise again. A Yoruba adage states axiomatically that when a toddler falls down while struggling to walk, he looks forward to see if there is any adult around to lift him up. But when an adult slips and falls down fortuitously he looks backwards to examine the cause of his fall.

    That is the difference between experience and potential. Banking on potential to govern a nation that requires experience as did the eaglet Nigerian military some years past can never bring any meaningful result. Both potential and experience have their role and chance in any society. But neither can take the place of the other.

     

    The difference

    You the youth of today are different from those of yesteryears in many ways and the differences are clear. The youth of the past were very hardworking and dedicated. They served their parents diligently and stood by them in all circumstances. They sought their parents’ advice and learned from the latter’s experiences. You the youth of today are very lazy, slothful, time wasting and lackadaisical in your attitude to life even as you are served by your parents from infancy to old age. Yet you despise those parents and treat them with disdain like nonentities. You believe that those parents had worked on your behalves and that you are only in the world to enjoy the fruits of their labour.

    The youth of the past were patient contended and full of respect for the elders. They were humble, obedient and always eager to learn as they queued up before the elders for knowledge. You the youth of today are very inpatient, greedily ambitious and you see yourselves as masters of knowledge when in actual fact you are slaves of ignorance.

    Unlike the youth of the past, you are mostly empty-headed, very arrogant, highly materialistic and hastily avaricious. You always want to start your lives from the peak of your parents’ achievements without asking about what those parents had gone through before reaching that peak.

    You spend money lavishly without working for it and you never think of bearing any responsibility either in the homes or in the society. You are generally characterised by all the conducts that were classified as shame in the past. To you, shame has its price. And as long as you can pay that price in coins by whatever means, you are important in your own estimation. Thus, shame, as far as you are concerned, is a vital aspect of culture which has no negative effect on your lifestyle. As a matter of fact you have taken shame for pride.

    If a few youths of the past can be described as a bunch of problems for their society, due to their public misconduct, majority of you today’s youths are the real cogs in the societal wheel of progress. To you, life has no meaning except it is heavily coded in money.

    Your slogan that “long life is irrelevant in the absence of money” is a testimony to this assertion. That life span in Nigeria has dropped so drastically is due to your disappointing lifestyle which often creates hypertension for your parents and leads to their early deaths.

    Few parents talk of heirs nowadays because those of you who are supposed to be their heirs have long thrown away the toga of worthy heirs. In the past, mothers were not known for staying with their daughters in the latter’s matrimonial homes while leaving their husbands behind without care. This strange but new trend that has almost become a part of Nigerian culture arose because of the incompetence of today’s young women, even after many years of training. Thus, despite the ubiquity of young men and women, there is scarcity of husbands and wives just as there is dearth of fathers and mothers.

    Virtually everything that matters to you today’s youths is devoid of our known core value. By your measure, the value of life can be found only in the volume of currencies.

     

    Causes of generational change

    Whenever there is cause to review the current generational trend with the intention of righting the wrong, you the youths of today are often quick in pointing accusing fingers mischievously at the generations ahead of you saying they caused the debacle. But while pinching the back of the elders you often forget that sooner or later you may become elders whose back will be pinched by the youths that may succeed your own generation. You have forgotten that most of the scientific discoveries and technological advancement of your age which lured you into roguery were not available for the past youths. There were no such things as hard drugs, cyber crimes, armed robbery, insurgency, sophisticated fraud through manipulation of figures and forgery of signatures. There were rare cases of rape, child trafficking, audacious prostitution and day light murder with impunity as are rampant among you today.

    To you, all these crimes are either professions or callings in which you actively thrive. Thus, you do not believe in the existence of any demarcation between decency and indecency an indication that ‘family name’ which was highly valued in the past has no meaning to you. This is why you are perceived as the most potent weapons of hooliganism by today’s Nigerian devilish politicians, who are mostly youths.

    Unlike most youths of the past, you were sent to school by your illiterate parents but your goal was mere certificate (as meal tickets) rather than knowledge (as propeller of quality life). And what you acquired in those schools in the name of education is hardly worth the paper on which your certificates are printed.

    For most of the years you spent in school, your preoccupation was either cultism or other frivolous activities that have no bearing with education. That is why most of you turn out to be unemployable university or polytechnic graduates. A few of you who secured public employments have been discovered to be sheer misfits on those jobs as your competence remains questionable.

     

    Implications

    The implications of all these are many. While most of you are not quite useful to the present you are also not hopeful about the future.

    There is hardly any major crime in Nigeria today that is not principally committed by you today’s youths all in the quest for money. It seems that the only language you understand is money and only those who can speak the language of money command your respect.

    Many centuries before our time, an Arab poet intuitively came up with a sonnet that fits perfectly into today’s Nigerian situation. He said:

    “Here is the era against which we had been warned through the admonitions of Ubayy Bn Ka‘ab and that of Abdullah Bn Mas‘ud; an era in which truth would be totally rejected while falsehood and insurgence would be glorified and held aloft; Should this era linger without any change (of attitude) neither cry at a funeral nor smile on the announcement of a new birth would be experienced”.

    Which of the situation expressed in the above poem is not applicable to Nigeria today. What impact does religion have on the society again?

    We used to know of motor spare parts. Today, spare parts are no more of motor but of human beings. And the most active merchants of this queer business are you the youth of today. When we talk of illegal oil bunkering, it is the business of the youth. When we talk of kidnapping, it is the business of today’s youths. When we talk of suicide bombing and terrorism, it is the business of today’s youths.

    And all these are for money and nothing else. Where is Nigeria going from here?

     

    Conclusion

    The aim of this expository letter is not to malign or denigrate the Nigerian youth of today. The children of this columnist are youths like you who do not inhabit an exclusive island. But preaching is like a muddy book surrounded by men and women of honour all of who are garlanded in immaculate regalia. No one of them will be spared if the mud is splashed either by accident or by design. As a onetime youth and now a father qualified to be called an elder, it is not expected of my type to start throwing stones at other peoples’ houses while residing in a glass house. But truth knows no boundary. It cruises on a track of frankness like a surging train which minds no gored ox. To rekindle Nigeria’s old hope or create a new one for the future, the youth of today must return to the established values of the past. It was through those values that the tranquility of the world was once solidly upheld. And it was through deviation from those that the world became as restive as it is today. If tranquility must return as wished by many, you, the youth of today, must change your loins for the better. And that is the only atonement that the world requires (from you) to return to a state of tranquility.

    Thus, the ongoing political campaigns in the country and the subsequent elections coming up next month, in which you are active participants will show the place of hope or otherwise of your future.

    We are all in the same boat of life. If you work towards wrecking it you have much more to to lose. Just remember that as you lay your bed so you will sleep on it. I pray God to guide you aright.

  • Monarch counsels youths

    The Olu of Itori in Ogun State, Oba Fatai Akamo, has advised youths to shun politicians who will use them as hoodlums during the next elections.

    Oba Akamo observed the rate at which many youths die due to the task assigned to them during electoral processes. He lamented that it was high time youths stood on their feet to disregard such act.

    Speaking on the contributions of traditional rulers to promote good governance, he said: “We ensure our domains are peaceful and calm during elections because constitutionally we have no role to play in politics. So, Nigerians should vote freely without fear.”

  • Monarch urges youths to shun thuggery

    The Olu of Itoriland, Ogun State, Oba Fatai Akamo, has called on  youths to distance themselves from any politician who would use them as political thugs.

    Oba Akamo, who observed the rate at which the lifespan of many youths were been shorten as a result of deadly task assigned to them during elections, lamented that it was high time all youths stands on their feet to say no to such act.

    The monarch who spoke with reporters in Ibadan called for a violence-free democratic. He said: ”Let Nigerians have free minds to votes the candidates of their choice without fear”.

    On the contributions of traditional rulers in promoting good governance, the monarch said: ”We do try our best to ensure that our domains are calm and peace ful during elections but Constitutionally we have no role to play in politics only giving advisory role if called for.”

    Oba Akamo also said that the monarchical system of government would maintain a concept of consistency in Nigeria economy if it was to be instituted into the country.

    Akamo stressed that countries that practiced the monarchical system of ruling were economically stable and more attractive  than the democracy system of ruling.

    “Countries such as Saudi Arabia and United Kingdom, have proved to the world that the monarchy system of government was peaceful, far better and richer than most democratic ruling system, “ he said.

    His word: “The democracy that we say we practice in Nigeria is far different from how its been practiced in America where we  copied it from,Ours is a democracy of violence, thuggery and ofcourse a do or die affair.” if we know we want to practice democracy then we should do it the way it was handed over to us.”

  • Controversy over arrest of Ibeju-Lekki youths

    Who ordered the arrest of six persons from the Oko-Olomi and Otunla villages in Ibeju-Lekki,  Lagos? Does their arrest have  to do with land disputes; robbery charges or an attempt on the life of a monarch, Oba Tajudeen Elomoro.

    These are the knotty issues the police must resolve for peace to reign in the area.

    The communities, Oko-Olomi and Otunla villages, are alleging that the traditional ruler of Iwerekun Elemoro land, Oba Tajudeen Elemoro instigated the arrest and detention of six indigenes of both villages for alleged robbery.

    But Oba Elemoro has debunked the  communities’ claims that he has been using policemen and thugs to harass their indigenes.

    Those arrested and charged to court by the police include Kufuli Batunde, Segun Eleku, Akorede Eleku, Lawal Dada, Luqman Adeniyi and Tajudeen Eleku. Speaking through their lawyers, Messrs Bamidele Ogundele and Michael Bayowa at a press conference in Lagos last week, the Oko-Olomi and Otunla villages claimed that the youths were arrested on December 23, 2014 within the premises of the Ikeja High Court.

    The lawyers claimed that the arrest was to frustrate the communities’ pending cases against the monarch before Justices Kazeem  Alogba and Oluwatoyin Ipaye, both of the Ikeja High Court.  The lawyers said those arrested  were arraigned last December 24,before Magistrate Abimbola Komolafe of an Ikeja Magistrate’s Court and were granted bail. But  in a statement by his lawyer, Mr Taofik Elias, Oba Elemoro said the allegation against his client was baseless because the persons arrested were involved in the November 24,2014 attack on the Elemoro Palace.

    According to Elias, the suspects were allegedly attempting to gain entrance into the monarch’s house but were thwarted by arrival of policemen from the nearby Elemoro Police Station.

    He claimed that after the incident, the monarch was taken to the General Hospital, Epe for treatment for shock and insomnia.

    “The police were invited and the Oba told them that he can identify the attackers and that they were from Oko-Olomi and Otunla villages.

    “Furthermore the suspects were arrested outside the gate of the Ikeja High Court. There was no arrest made within the premises of the court,” Elias said.

    According to him, after their arraignment on December 24, 2014, they were unable to perfect their bail conditions and were taken to prison.

    The lawyer said he was reliably informed that the police were planning to withdraw the charge against the suspects.

    Elias said he had therefore petitioned the Lagos State Attorney-General and Commissioner for Justice, M.  Ade Ipaye, to take over their prosecution.

    “This case is not about the civil suits because the judges have already asked parties to maintain the status quo with regards to the issues before the court. This case is about an attempt on the life of the monarch and we want to pursue it to ensure that justice is done.”

     

  • ‘Youths need skill centres’

    Youths in Abuja Municipal Area Council (AMAC) under the auspices of Concerned AMAC Youths have called on the council chairman, Hon. Micah Jiba to set up skill acquisition centres for them.

    Coordinator of the Youth body, Comrade Matthew Yerimah, said that they were promised in the past that the leadership of the council was going to set up skills acquisition centre to empower the youth, but they are yet to see the actualisation of the prolonged promise.

    According to Yerimah, it is believed that the youth are the live wire of any society, but, it is obvious that most leaders do not plan to invest in the lives of the youth in the society, thereby neglecting them to be use for negative vices.

    “The youth are been neglected by the government of the day, that is why they are left with no other choice than to commit crimes. We do not want that to happen in AMAC, that is why we are calling on the council boss, Hon. Micah Jiba to plan for the youth before his tenure expires.

    “We know that in less than a year and six months from now, the present council administration led by Hon. Micah Jiba would round off, but, we do not want it to end without another government doing something reasonable for the youth of this council.

    “We are tired of been used and dump by politicians, after making unfulfilled promises. We believe that the present council boss is a good man and we are appealing that he should use his office to setup skills acquisition centre in one of the satellite towns or in the city centre,” he said.

    Secretary of the youth body, Comrade Shekwo Musa, also said that most of the youth in the council are jobless because of lack of employment, that when the skills acquisition centre is built, it would go a long way in empowering youth in the council.

  • Why Lagos youths will vote for Ambode, by leader

    the President of Young Achievers Campaign Organisation of Nigeria (YACOON), Mr. Temitope Adewale, has said Lagos State youths prefer All Progressives Congress (APC) governorship candidate, Mr Akinwunmi Ambode, to others.

    The youth leader compared Ambode with other parties’ candidate, returning a verdict that the APC man was the preferred candidate.

    According to him, the People Democratic Party (PDP) candidate, Jimi Agbaje, was no match to Ambode.

    He said: “Agbaje is a gentleman and, no doubt, appeals to several youths in Lagos State. The pharmacist-turned politician wowed Lagos youths with a Nollywood style of campaign in 2007. He has ever since been in the minds of Lagosians as a man of the future. Pundits regretted that Agbaje failed to take the humble pie and become a commissioner under Governor Babatunde Fashola in 2007, a move many claim would have sealed his fate as a possible successor to Fashola in 2015.

    “Agbaje shunned what may have been a lifetime opportunity to learn from service, which a much more politically experienced Senator Hilary Clinton took in 2009, serving under her former rival, President Barack Obama. Mrs Clinton, a United States former First Lady, knew that to boost her chances of being the first woman President of the U.S in 2016, she needed to boost her foreign policy experience, which she successfully did as Secretary of State. Beyond that, she showed to the world that she had the capacity to collaborate with past rivals, learn from them and even serve under them. These are important leadership qualities that Agbaje failed to demonstrate during the eight years tenure of Fashola…

  • Artistes advise Nigerian youths on elections

    Artistes advise Nigerian youths on elections

    While most Nollywood actors and filmmakers have pitched their tents with some candidates for the coming elections, other artistes appear neutral, as they have come together to urge Nigerians to explore their fundamental human rights by coming out en mass to vote.

    Spearheaded by advocacy group, Enough is Enough (EiE) Nigeria, the artistes, in a series of short videos, directed by Body Lawson and posted on the internet, are encouraging young Nigerians to not only register and vote, but also ensure their votes are protected.

    “So you registered to vote. You should be very proud. Because that card you hold in your hand has the power to change this nation one vote at a time. So, it’s very simple; select, vote and protect,” says songstress and photographer, TY Bello.

    Pop artiste, 2Face Idibia also reaches out to a wider audience with vernacular, saying; “I go register, I go select carefully, I go vote wisely, I go protect my vote. I be 2Face Idiibia. You sef go out there; register, select, vote, protect. 2Baba say so.”

    On the other hand, Nollywood actress, Ufuoma Ejenbor called on voters not to be swayed by electioneering promises. “They would hold rallies, they always do. That’s fine. But let’s not get carried away with the singing and dancing. Let us get hold of their manifesto. Let us understand their individual plan for every sector of the economy. Let us read it, be knowledgeable of it and balance it out with reality. Enough is Enough,” she advised.

    EiE is also organising a Presidential and Governorship election debate series called The Peoples’ Debate, in partnership with GenVoices, Gemstone and the Nigerian Global Shapers Hubs (Lagos, Abuja, Calabar, Ibadan & Kano).

  • Don’t sell your votes, doctors tell youths

    As the 2015  general election approaches ,medical doctors at  Ajegunle, Lagos State have cautioned  youths against selling their votes  to politicians who have nothing to offer them in terms of development.

    The doctors gave the warning during an awareness campaign on diabetes.

    Dr Sanni Olaniyi, one of the doctors’ spokesmen, said youths should vote for candidates who  could solve the problems confronting the nation.

    He said: “If the head is bad, the rest of the body cannot function. Do not mortgage your votes. If they give you money, collect it, but do the right thing by voting for the  persons you are convinced  can deliver and take us out of our present problems.

    Also speaking, Dr Adebiyi Ebimisan of Tolu Medical Hospital urged youths to shun violence during elections.