Photos from Bishop David Oyedepo’s daughter’s Love wedding
Popular and eccentric pastor bishop Oyedepo's Daughter recently got married and it was an occasion of celebration
Here are some of the pictures of the daughter and her husband looking happy and rejoicefull of their recent union
We wish them a wonderful marriage
News, Events, Entertainment, Fashion, Gossips, Football News, Current Affairs And Politics and lots more
Saturday, 23 March 2013
Friday, 22 March 2013
You’ve seen dog with a human face, now meet the fish with a person’s teeth
This sheepshead fish has teeth that look like those of a human (Picture: YouTube)
Hot on the heels of a dog with a human face comes a fish with teeth that look like those of a person.
This sheepshead fish has a certain human quality to it, its dentures look eerily similar to ours.
It can be found in North America and is widely known for its black and white stripes.
But this particular fish that was captured in Florida will only be remembered for one thing, its gnashers.
An Irish tourist caught the fish (Picture: YouTube)
The sheepshead is not naturally vicious, so you’re not in danger of getting bit by something that looks like your gran, but other species in the Sparidae family have been known to switch sexes.
The Irish tourist who caught it seemed surprised at his find while he was being filmed proudly holding it aloft.
The camera man said “what have you got there?” He responded “The biggest fish I ever caught”
The man filming added “What do you think about that for a pair of choppers?” To much amusement all round.
Wednesday, 20 March 2013
Woman Murders Husband, 2 Children, Then Kills Herself (PHOTOS)
A mother shot and killed her two children and her husband before turning the gun on herself this week, according to police.
Police say they found the body of suspected killer Angelica Vazquez, 43, and her three family members in their Texas home on Wednesday. The victims are identified as her husband, Marcelo Vazquez, 44, and her two kids, Paulina Vazquez, 21, and Alejandro Vazquez, 18.
A handgun was found on the floor near Angelica's body. Police were still searching for a motive on Thursday.
Police responded on Saturday after a woman called 911 to report that she'd heard gunfire coming from the Vazquez home. They knocked on the door and spoke to a neighbor, but found no reason to force their way in. The same officers returned on Wednesday and discovered newspapers and mail piling up, so they entered the home.
"I'm just shaking... I can't even express it right now," Gustavo Herrera, a family friend, told WFAA. Another person close to the family told the network that Angelica recently endured chemotherapy treatments in her fight against cancer.
Angelica's death was ruled a suicide, while the other three were ruled homicides.
Sunday, 17 March 2013
Photos: 5 Most Expensive Cars In The World
For the enthusiast of speed, driving at higher speed is their religion. And the machines are their gods.
The increasing number of car lovers is forcing most of the car manufacturers to come up with their latest versions with amazing features. In today’s market, the customers are not worried about the cost. Everything they want is a classy sport look and the top most speed.
Here is a list of the 5 most expensive cars in the world:
1. Maybach Exelero
Cost: $8,000,000
This car of the cars, Maybach Exelero holds the number one position as the most expensive car in the World.
The Elelero came into existence because of a competition among the students of the Pforzheim Polytechnic Department of Transport Design.
This two-seater speed monster weighs around 2.6 tonnes and during the tests, it reached a top-speed of 218.38 miles per hour.
It can reach upto 60 miles per hour in just 4.4 seconds. It will come with a V12 twin turbo engine. This engine was prepared for 5.9 litres and tuned for 700 bhp. It will produce a torque 738 lb ft.
2. The Bugatti Veyron Super Sports
Cost: $2,400,000
With a price of $2,400,000, Bugati Veyron has become the second costliest car in this list. This supercar was the result of the design from Volkswagen Motors. It was produced by the Bugati Automobiles SAS.
Veyron is also the fastest street legal car with a top speed of 431km/hr. It can reach 0-60 km in just 2.5 seconds. This supercar got its name from Pierre Veyron, the winner of the Le Mans in 1993. Pierre Veyron represented the Bugati firm.
Unlike the other super cars, Bugati Veyron doesn’t require any special license.
3. Ferrari 599XX
Cost: $2,000,000 (expected)
The business tycoon of India, Anil Ambani said that when Ferrari moves in the road, people can see it but when it is at top speed, people can only hear it.
Ferrari bags the third rank in the list of the expensive cars in the world. This speed monster is powered by a 700-hp model of the factory V12 engine. It don’t have any turbos or superchargers.
The exact price of this model is not yet revealed. However rumors says that it will cost around $2,000,000.
4. Aston Martin One-77
Cost: $1,850,000
The powerful performance and the stunning looks of the Aston Martin One-77 makes it superior among the previous super cars from Aston Martin.
This will be another limited edition from Aston Martin. It can reach 0-60 miles per hour in mere 3.4 seconds. It will be having a 750 hp engine.
The Aston Martin One-77 surpasses the Bugati Veyron in terms of luxury. With a cost of $1,85,000, this super car holds the fourth place in the list of the expensive cars.
5. Zenvo ST1
Cost: $1,800,000
This model made it way to the list of the super cars from Denmark.
The Zenvo ST1 comes with a supercharged and turbocharged 7.0 liter V8 engine that can result in a 1,250 hp engine.
With a cost of $1,800,000, Zenvo ST1 comes in the fifth rank in the list of the expensive cars in the world.
Saturday, 16 March 2013
#OgaAtTheTop: Lest We Subdue Reality With A Chuckle
This is a hilarious time for the Nigerian community online. The #OgaAtTheTop video has gone viral. The ignorance of the Lagos State Commandant of the Nigerian Security and Civil Defence Corps is now a common internet joke. The video clip shows Obafaiye Shem the Lagos State NSCDC commandant unable to give the web address of his organisation during his appearance on Channels Television’s flagship breakfast show Sunrise.
The creative humour of the young Nigerian is on rampage with the joke now interpreted with several images courtesy of Photoshop splashed all over Facebook, Twitter and BBM. While we may be having a good laugh over my oga at the top at the moment, the reality behind this public show of shame surpasses the humour by far.
Before we even go any further, has anyone realised that many top politicians, CEOs, and men of the Armed Forces these days can’t grant interviews without the exercise turning into a media gaffe? However you choose to look at it, this problem is a national crisis, in my opinion, especially since even our president is guilty in this regard, anyone in doubt please watch the Amanpour interview again.
My concern though is what our definition Leadership has become in the Nigeria. Our definition is simple: My ‘Oga at the top’. What we have adopted as a nation, intentionally or otherwise, is the ‘Great man theory’ of leadership. The theory states that the leader is the great man we all answer to and he can do no wrong. This theory is perhaps why our country is the way it is. The ‘oga at the top’ is the one who calls the shots, no one else.
Every decision is taken solely by him, delegation is a foreign word. Followership in Nigeria is thus described as an uncompromising resolve to be loyal to a leader in any circumstance, following blindly. Indeed promotion in the Nigerian Civil Service is hugely dependent on your loyalty to ‘the oga at the top’ initiative does not really count. If a follower shows any hint of initiative, he may be considered ‘too wise’.
From that day forward, the Oga at the top would likely label him an enemy who is after his job. So when the Lagos State Commandant of the Nigerian Security and Civil Defence Corp (NSCDC) cannot give the website of this organization correctly, don’t be surprised. Complacency is at work, the ‘great man’ doesn’t need to be at the top of his game, as he is now an oga at the top, even though he has an Oga at the top, who may likely not know the address himself, as we speak. I personally believe that Leadership is communication, collaboration and continuity.
However the leadership structure in the Nigerian setting lacks all three. If the leadership of the NSCDC take communication seriously, the web address would be at the commandant’s fingertips. The Oga at the top mentality can even be found in religious circles. The religious leader is seen as an anointed man who is superior to others because of his anointing. It becomes a problem to address James by his first name, now he is Pastor James and if he has founded many parishes he is now Daddy. This ‘man of God’ replaces God for several people and they take what he says wholeheartedly without embarking on a research on their own. This is why fake churches defraud members and fake prophets sleep with female members, if you are wondering what charm is at work, it is the Great-man theory of leadership.
“Our Pastor, the ‘Oga at the top’ said we should do it. What choice do we have?” they would say. You then wonder if these people consult their bibles at all, to check what they are being told. The father at home is the ‘Oga at the top’ who is out to rule his family with a high-hand, punishing at will without taking time to explain what wrong the children did. He enjoys how he is feared by even his wife, confusing fear for respect, and in the end the children grow into dysfunctional adults eventually repeating the cycle which their parents began.
Please don’t get me wrong, leaders deserve a whole lot of respect, but leadership does not make one man superior over another. Leadership is collaboration and followers play a huge role in the success of any team. In Nigeria, now is the time to redefine leadership, the ‘oga at the top’ great-man ideology needs to die fast for this nation to move forward. Some of this ideology is rooted in our tradition with strange beliefs, for example, that ‘it is wrong to correct an elder’ or that; ‘old people don’t lie’.
In certain contexts, this ideology applied can work well, but in practice Nigeria must move beyond this belief, a younger person can caution an older person with respect and yes old people do lie sometimes! Leaders and potential leaders must have enough self-esteem to separate the position they occupy from who they are. A leader should be humble enough to admit ignorance, and where a follower bails the team out of a problem, a leader should give credit to that person.
Can you imagine what would have happened, had Obafaiye Shem simply said: “I can’t recall right now what the website is, but once you get on Google and search for us, you won’t miss it.”? This ‘Oga at the top’ mentality must end fast!
Before we even go any further, has anyone realised that many top politicians, CEOs, and men of the Armed Forces these days can’t grant interviews without the exercise turning into a media gaffe? However you choose to look at it, this problem is a national crisis, in my opinion, especially since even our president is guilty in this regard, anyone in doubt please watch the Amanpour interview again.
My concern though is what our definition Leadership has become in the Nigeria. Our definition is simple: My ‘Oga at the top’. What we have adopted as a nation, intentionally or otherwise, is the ‘Great man theory’ of leadership. The theory states that the leader is the great man we all answer to and he can do no wrong. This theory is perhaps why our country is the way it is. The ‘oga at the top’ is the one who calls the shots, no one else.
Every decision is taken solely by him, delegation is a foreign word. Followership in Nigeria is thus described as an uncompromising resolve to be loyal to a leader in any circumstance, following blindly. Indeed promotion in the Nigerian Civil Service is hugely dependent on your loyalty to ‘the oga at the top’ initiative does not really count. If a follower shows any hint of initiative, he may be considered ‘too wise’.
From that day forward, the Oga at the top would likely label him an enemy who is after his job. So when the Lagos State Commandant of the Nigerian Security and Civil Defence Corp (NSCDC) cannot give the website of this organization correctly, don’t be surprised. Complacency is at work, the ‘great man’ doesn’t need to be at the top of his game, as he is now an oga at the top, even though he has an Oga at the top, who may likely not know the address himself, as we speak. I personally believe that Leadership is communication, collaboration and continuity.
However the leadership structure in the Nigerian setting lacks all three. If the leadership of the NSCDC take communication seriously, the web address would be at the commandant’s fingertips. The Oga at the top mentality can even be found in religious circles. The religious leader is seen as an anointed man who is superior to others because of his anointing. It becomes a problem to address James by his first name, now he is Pastor James and if he has founded many parishes he is now Daddy. This ‘man of God’ replaces God for several people and they take what he says wholeheartedly without embarking on a research on their own. This is why fake churches defraud members and fake prophets sleep with female members, if you are wondering what charm is at work, it is the Great-man theory of leadership.
“Our Pastor, the ‘Oga at the top’ said we should do it. What choice do we have?” they would say. You then wonder if these people consult their bibles at all, to check what they are being told. The father at home is the ‘Oga at the top’ who is out to rule his family with a high-hand, punishing at will without taking time to explain what wrong the children did. He enjoys how he is feared by even his wife, confusing fear for respect, and in the end the children grow into dysfunctional adults eventually repeating the cycle which their parents began.
Please don’t get me wrong, leaders deserve a whole lot of respect, but leadership does not make one man superior over another. Leadership is collaboration and followers play a huge role in the success of any team. In Nigeria, now is the time to redefine leadership, the ‘oga at the top’ great-man ideology needs to die fast for this nation to move forward. Some of this ideology is rooted in our tradition with strange beliefs, for example, that ‘it is wrong to correct an elder’ or that; ‘old people don’t lie’.
In certain contexts, this ideology applied can work well, but in practice Nigeria must move beyond this belief, a younger person can caution an older person with respect and yes old people do lie sometimes! Leaders and potential leaders must have enough self-esteem to separate the position they occupy from who they are. A leader should be humble enough to admit ignorance, and where a follower bails the team out of a problem, a leader should give credit to that person.
Can you imagine what would have happened, had Obafaiye Shem simply said: “I can’t recall right now what the website is, but once you get on Google and search for us, you won’t miss it.”? This ‘Oga at the top’ mentality must end fast!
Thursday, 14 March 2013
The Sacred River In Ebonyi Where Fishes Hear And Obey Human Voices
The sun was preparing to retire to the east for a well-deserved rest after scorching the earth tirelessly all day. A group of men in a convoy of four motorcycles arrived a stream, which locals prefer to call a river, in a remote part of a village.
The road to the river is uneven. In fact, it is doubtful if the road had ever been graded not to talk of being asphalted. The river is surrounded by mangrove with bamboos, standing as if on sentry duty while some children were playing inside the river, splashing water about merrily. Dateline: Sunday, March 3, 2013.
On arrival, the eldest of the men, Pa Aaron Njoku, a slim built fellow with springy steps, crossed to the other side of the river and walked up a few metres. Left in his own world as it were, he muttered some words like appeasement of or deference to an unseen being before rejoining the party.
He spent just a few minutes on the trip across the river. But his mission was accomplished as events proved few minutes later, to show that oftentimes, nature plays mankind a game too hard to understand.
Pa Njoku, who is one of the custodians of the river, retrieved a wrap of palm fruits from another man and began to throw them, one after another, into the river. As he did that, he was saying: “Fish, come and eat palm fruits! Fish, come and eat palm fruits!! Fish, come and eat palm fruits!!!” Suddenly, the river began to rumble and fishes of various sizes emerged from the shallow water and began to struggle for the palm fruits being thrown by the elderly man. As soon as the man ran out of palm fruits, placidity returned to the river. The fishes disappeared. A while later, another man began to throw palm fruits into the river, inviting the fishes to come and make merry. The fishes also honoured the invitation.
Welcome to Okwa Ibe River in Ihenu-Uburu, Ohaozara Local Government Area of Ebonyi State. A sacred affair, it is home to king-size fishes, which hearken to the voice of men.
Okwa Ibe River could be described as one of the wonders of the world. From one generation to another, the mystery of the fishes that obey the voice of men has been playing it.
To start with, the kind of fishes found in the shallow stretch defies logic. Again, the fishes are believed to be human beings, who reincarnated in that form. This was revealed by Pa Njoku. To cap it up, he further volunteered that when a prominent indigene of the place dies, one of the fishes will also die and turn upside down.
Daily Sun visited Okwa Ibe recently and was warmly welcomed by the fishes.
The making of mystery
Pa Njoku, an indigene of Umuza in Ihenu, described himself as “one of the people in charge of overseeing the river.”
Explaining how the Okwa Ibe fishes came about, he said: “It started very long time ago, from time immemorial. Our forefathers were overseeing it and whoever is chosen takes over. I’m now in charge and it is the whole villagers that gathered and agreed that I’m the one who should be breaking kolanut or slaughtering he-goats brought there. I accepted it because I cannot disobey my people. So, I started breaking kolanuts and performing necessary rites.”
He added that the river was not all about the fishes in them. “People who have various problems or challenges do come to appeal to the river for assistance and when their problems are solved they return with he-goats to give thanks. When such happens, our people gather and make merry. The name of the stream is Okwa Ibe. It means something or someone who helps the people. When things are difficult, the river will be approached.”
Pa Njoku further disclosed that Okwa Ibe helped in establishing the truth when there is a dispute. Hear him: “When someone denies doing what he is accused of, the villagers will gather to find out the truth. A calabash will be brought with kolanuts and he or she will stand inside the river with the calabash containing kolanuts and some water. The person will declare his or her innocence, eat a piece of the kolanut and drink some water. If he remains alive for a year, it means that he was, indeed, innocent.”
Continuing, Pa Njoku said: “Okwa Ibe came into existence in the time of our forebearers. But we were made to understand that it was a covenant between the gods and Ihenu people as represented by our forebearers. Up till today, our people have not broken their rules. There is a part of the river (Eta) where people can kill fish but Okwa Ibe area is strictly out of bounds for fishing.”
Consequences of disobedience
Asked what happens if anyone catches fish at Okwa Ibe, Pa Njoku answered: “Whoever catches fish at Okwa Ibe will not live and he or she will not be mourned. Anyone, who eventually goes afishing here has forfeited his or her own life. In short, anyone who kills fish here has himself to blame. There is no one guarding the river but if anyone sneaks in under the cloak of darkness and does anything fishy, except he does not pass where there is river or stream before he can escape death.
“Many people have tried it and it did not pay them. It has made many people blind and such people have been confessing with their mouth that Okwa Ibe imprisoned them.”
Does it mean that the fishes will respond and come out whenever anyone throws palm fruits into the river?
“Whoever comes to Okwa Ibe without evil intentions, if he throws palm fruits into the river, they will come out for them. But if you come to me as the chief priest, I will ask you why you want me to call out the fishes. But if you come on your own and throw palm fruits into the river, they can eat them. However, if you have bad intentions, even if you pour a basin of palm fruits into the river, they will ignore you. Many people have tried it and they did not see any fish.
For example, some soldiers wanted to eat fresh fish during the Nigeria – Biafra war and they decided to come to Okwa Ibe to make some catch. So, they came to Okwa Ibe with palm fruits and guns. They threw palm fruits into the river for a long time but they did not see any fish,” he explained.
Pa Njoku further said another remarkable thing that happened was that during the Nigeria – Biafra civil war, no fish was seen in the river. “We, Ihenu people, thought that the mystery was over. We thought that the thing, which started from time immemorial, had gone with the war. But when the war ended, one day, somebody reported that the fishes had started appearing again. It was something beyond the understanding of men. And since the war ended till today, fishes continue to appear in their numbers.
“It can be said that the fishes at Okwa Ibe are sacred; they are not to be toyed with because they have been there through the ages. Some communities have things they revere or respect; we cannot afford to destroy this mystery in our generation.”
Is it true that Ihenu people do incarnate as fishes?
“There is something that seem like Ihenu, turning to fish but it is not all Ihenu. What makes it appear as if Ihenu people incarnate as fishes is that whenever a prominent son of the land dies, one of the fishes at Okwa Ibe will die. So, before you see a dead fish at Okwa Ibe, a prominent son of Ihenu must have died. This has been happening from ages.”
Can someone pick and eat a dead fish at Okwa Ibe?
“No one can eat it. If anyone picks a dead fish from Okwa Ibe and goes home with it, his kith and kin will chase him back with it. And if the person decides to go and sell it to an outsider, whatever happens to him is his own problem. Many of our people are Christians but none has tried to destroy Okwa Ibe because no one knows how it came about. If someone pours chemical into the river in an attempt to poison the fishes, the person has succeeded in killing himself.”
The chief priest made other revelations about Okwa Ibe. He said: “The spot where the fishes congregate is beneficial to mankind. For instance, if anyone is troubled by evil spirits or witches in his home in any part of the world, all the person needs do is to come and we call out the fishes and fetch some water from the spot. If the person puts the water in a bottle and hangs it in his house or sprinkles it around his home, that will be the end of the disturbance by witches or evil spirits. Again, we drink the water. We use it for cooking and other things. When we have a new child, we put the water into his or her mouth because we are Ihenu people, who come from water. Sincerely speaking, we come from water and it is very difficult for an indigene of this place to be drowned except the person has committed one thing or the other. Moreover, people do not get drowned at Okwa Ibe. If someone crossing falls into it, somehow, God will save the person from drowning.”
Incarnation as fishes
Mr. Aka Godwin, Chairman, Ihenu General Assembly, offered fresh perspectives. He told Daily Sun: “I want to make some addition about the origin of the fishes. We were told that it started hundreds of years ago. It was as a result of a war that took place within the village. The war was so fierce many people were killed in cold blood. Some group of people decided that instead of dying in cold blood during the war, they jumped inside the river and reincarnated as fishes. That is how it all started. Those people who chose to jump into the river and drown instead of waiting to be killed in cold blood reincarnated as fishes. That was a very long time ago. In fact, no living human being can say when it started.”
Aka added: “This place has been a tourist centre and we’ve been begging government to come and develop it so that it can attract people from far and near. Though people do come to see things for themselves, foreigners can come from outside the country to feed their eyes if it is properly developed or modernised.”
In the same vein, Mr. Ezinna Vincent Obinna Akpa, President General, Eweze Uburu United Assembly, urged government to maximise the potential of Okwa Ibe for benefit of the people.
Waxing philosophical, he opined that their forefathers, who established the mystery, had a reason for doing so, noting that this could be auspicious time to realise the objective. “We are happy that Okwa Ibe is becoming known. I believe that things like this bring development to any given society. Our forefathers had a reason for doing it and, perhaps, this is the time for it to manifest for those of us who are used to it. It may not be so exciting to us, who see it everyday, but any first time visitor will testify that it is awe-inspiring,” Akpa said.
The road to the river is uneven. In fact, it is doubtful if the road had ever been graded not to talk of being asphalted. The river is surrounded by mangrove with bamboos, standing as if on sentry duty while some children were playing inside the river, splashing water about merrily. Dateline: Sunday, March 3, 2013.
On arrival, the eldest of the men, Pa Aaron Njoku, a slim built fellow with springy steps, crossed to the other side of the river and walked up a few metres. Left in his own world as it were, he muttered some words like appeasement of or deference to an unseen being before rejoining the party.
He spent just a few minutes on the trip across the river. But his mission was accomplished as events proved few minutes later, to show that oftentimes, nature plays mankind a game too hard to understand.
Pa Njoku, who is one of the custodians of the river, retrieved a wrap of palm fruits from another man and began to throw them, one after another, into the river. As he did that, he was saying: “Fish, come and eat palm fruits! Fish, come and eat palm fruits!! Fish, come and eat palm fruits!!!” Suddenly, the river began to rumble and fishes of various sizes emerged from the shallow water and began to struggle for the palm fruits being thrown by the elderly man. As soon as the man ran out of palm fruits, placidity returned to the river. The fishes disappeared. A while later, another man began to throw palm fruits into the river, inviting the fishes to come and make merry. The fishes also honoured the invitation.
Welcome to Okwa Ibe River in Ihenu-Uburu, Ohaozara Local Government Area of Ebonyi State. A sacred affair, it is home to king-size fishes, which hearken to the voice of men.
Okwa Ibe River could be described as one of the wonders of the world. From one generation to another, the mystery of the fishes that obey the voice of men has been playing it.
To start with, the kind of fishes found in the shallow stretch defies logic. Again, the fishes are believed to be human beings, who reincarnated in that form. This was revealed by Pa Njoku. To cap it up, he further volunteered that when a prominent indigene of the place dies, one of the fishes will also die and turn upside down.
Daily Sun visited Okwa Ibe recently and was warmly welcomed by the fishes.
The making of mystery
Pa Njoku, an indigene of Umuza in Ihenu, described himself as “one of the people in charge of overseeing the river.”
Explaining how the Okwa Ibe fishes came about, he said: “It started very long time ago, from time immemorial. Our forefathers were overseeing it and whoever is chosen takes over. I’m now in charge and it is the whole villagers that gathered and agreed that I’m the one who should be breaking kolanut or slaughtering he-goats brought there. I accepted it because I cannot disobey my people. So, I started breaking kolanuts and performing necessary rites.”
He added that the river was not all about the fishes in them. “People who have various problems or challenges do come to appeal to the river for assistance and when their problems are solved they return with he-goats to give thanks. When such happens, our people gather and make merry. The name of the stream is Okwa Ibe. It means something or someone who helps the people. When things are difficult, the river will be approached.”
Pa Njoku further disclosed that Okwa Ibe helped in establishing the truth when there is a dispute. Hear him: “When someone denies doing what he is accused of, the villagers will gather to find out the truth. A calabash will be brought with kolanuts and he or she will stand inside the river with the calabash containing kolanuts and some water. The person will declare his or her innocence, eat a piece of the kolanut and drink some water. If he remains alive for a year, it means that he was, indeed, innocent.”
Continuing, Pa Njoku said: “Okwa Ibe came into existence in the time of our forebearers. But we were made to understand that it was a covenant between the gods and Ihenu people as represented by our forebearers. Up till today, our people have not broken their rules. There is a part of the river (Eta) where people can kill fish but Okwa Ibe area is strictly out of bounds for fishing.”
Consequences of disobedience
Asked what happens if anyone catches fish at Okwa Ibe, Pa Njoku answered: “Whoever catches fish at Okwa Ibe will not live and he or she will not be mourned. Anyone, who eventually goes afishing here has forfeited his or her own life. In short, anyone who kills fish here has himself to blame. There is no one guarding the river but if anyone sneaks in under the cloak of darkness and does anything fishy, except he does not pass where there is river or stream before he can escape death.
“Many people have tried it and it did not pay them. It has made many people blind and such people have been confessing with their mouth that Okwa Ibe imprisoned them.”
Does it mean that the fishes will respond and come out whenever anyone throws palm fruits into the river?
“Whoever comes to Okwa Ibe without evil intentions, if he throws palm fruits into the river, they will come out for them. But if you come to me as the chief priest, I will ask you why you want me to call out the fishes. But if you come on your own and throw palm fruits into the river, they can eat them. However, if you have bad intentions, even if you pour a basin of palm fruits into the river, they will ignore you. Many people have tried it and they did not see any fish.
For example, some soldiers wanted to eat fresh fish during the Nigeria – Biafra war and they decided to come to Okwa Ibe to make some catch. So, they came to Okwa Ibe with palm fruits and guns. They threw palm fruits into the river for a long time but they did not see any fish,” he explained.
Pa Njoku further said another remarkable thing that happened was that during the Nigeria – Biafra civil war, no fish was seen in the river. “We, Ihenu people, thought that the mystery was over. We thought that the thing, which started from time immemorial, had gone with the war. But when the war ended, one day, somebody reported that the fishes had started appearing again. It was something beyond the understanding of men. And since the war ended till today, fishes continue to appear in their numbers.
“It can be said that the fishes at Okwa Ibe are sacred; they are not to be toyed with because they have been there through the ages. Some communities have things they revere or respect; we cannot afford to destroy this mystery in our generation.”
Is it true that Ihenu people do incarnate as fishes?
“There is something that seem like Ihenu, turning to fish but it is not all Ihenu. What makes it appear as if Ihenu people incarnate as fishes is that whenever a prominent son of the land dies, one of the fishes at Okwa Ibe will die. So, before you see a dead fish at Okwa Ibe, a prominent son of Ihenu must have died. This has been happening from ages.”
Can someone pick and eat a dead fish at Okwa Ibe?
“No one can eat it. If anyone picks a dead fish from Okwa Ibe and goes home with it, his kith and kin will chase him back with it. And if the person decides to go and sell it to an outsider, whatever happens to him is his own problem. Many of our people are Christians but none has tried to destroy Okwa Ibe because no one knows how it came about. If someone pours chemical into the river in an attempt to poison the fishes, the person has succeeded in killing himself.”
The chief priest made other revelations about Okwa Ibe. He said: “The spot where the fishes congregate is beneficial to mankind. For instance, if anyone is troubled by evil spirits or witches in his home in any part of the world, all the person needs do is to come and we call out the fishes and fetch some water from the spot. If the person puts the water in a bottle and hangs it in his house or sprinkles it around his home, that will be the end of the disturbance by witches or evil spirits. Again, we drink the water. We use it for cooking and other things. When we have a new child, we put the water into his or her mouth because we are Ihenu people, who come from water. Sincerely speaking, we come from water and it is very difficult for an indigene of this place to be drowned except the person has committed one thing or the other. Moreover, people do not get drowned at Okwa Ibe. If someone crossing falls into it, somehow, God will save the person from drowning.”
Incarnation as fishes
Mr. Aka Godwin, Chairman, Ihenu General Assembly, offered fresh perspectives. He told Daily Sun: “I want to make some addition about the origin of the fishes. We were told that it started hundreds of years ago. It was as a result of a war that took place within the village. The war was so fierce many people were killed in cold blood. Some group of people decided that instead of dying in cold blood during the war, they jumped inside the river and reincarnated as fishes. That is how it all started. Those people who chose to jump into the river and drown instead of waiting to be killed in cold blood reincarnated as fishes. That was a very long time ago. In fact, no living human being can say when it started.”
Aka added: “This place has been a tourist centre and we’ve been begging government to come and develop it so that it can attract people from far and near. Though people do come to see things for themselves, foreigners can come from outside the country to feed their eyes if it is properly developed or modernised.”
In the same vein, Mr. Ezinna Vincent Obinna Akpa, President General, Eweze Uburu United Assembly, urged government to maximise the potential of Okwa Ibe for benefit of the people.
Waxing philosophical, he opined that their forefathers, who established the mystery, had a reason for doing so, noting that this could be auspicious time to realise the objective. “We are happy that Okwa Ibe is becoming known. I believe that things like this bring development to any given society. Our forefathers had a reason for doing it and, perhaps, this is the time for it to manifest for those of us who are used to it. It may not be so exciting to us, who see it everyday, but any first time visitor will testify that it is awe-inspiring,” Akpa said.
Wednesday, 13 March 2013
Britney Spears Exposes Her Bare Bottom While Hanging Out With Her Children (Photo)
Britney Spears sat on the grass and watched sons Jayden, 6, and Sean, 7, play soccer Sunday in Los Angeles.
Just another soccer mom, right?
Except for the fact that the pop star changed into a short white dress and appeared to have nothing under it.
And as she got up to leave, she kept pressing down the backside of the dress, but in one photo the breeze got the best of her, revealing her bare bottom.
Just another soccer mom, right?
Except for the fact that the pop star changed into a short white dress and appeared to have nothing under it.
And as she got up to leave, she kept pressing down the backside of the dress, but in one photo the breeze got the best of her, revealing her bare bottom.
BREAKING NEWS: Just In From ILESA in OSUN State, NIGERIA,Human parts Seller Caught Red Handed
Man Caught Selling Human Part (Viewer Discretion Advised)
The whole of Oke-Opo area in Ilesha Osun State was thrown into panic when human butchered and parts seller was apprehended by the Police after tip off by the residents of the area.
The man in the picture below was caught in the act while dis-membering an unknown man
This is so disheartening, Horrible, heartless, callous, name it! all because of money?
Where are we going in dis Country?
Monday, 11 March 2013
Woman With World's Strongest Vagina Lifts Weight With It (PHOTO)
Her weightlifting technique puts certain Olympic events to shame.
Tatyana Kozhevnikova unofficially owns the World's Strongest Vagina by virtue of her record for vagina weightlifting, according to the Sun. She recently showed off her prowess on "The Body Shocking Show" in England.
She inserts a wooden egg into her vagina and attaches the weight to the egg. She contracts her muscles around the egg and lifts the poundage. The 40-something Russian mom says in the video it has taken her 20 years to become so powerful in her nether region.
She reportedly set the vagina weightlifting record by hoisting 31 pounds in 2009. Afterward she was quoted as saying, “It’s enough to exercise your vagina five minutes a day, ladies, and in just one week you’ll be able to give yourself and your man unforgettable pleasure in bed.
Tatyana Kozhevnikova unofficially owns the World's Strongest Vagina by virtue of her record for vagina weightlifting, according to the Sun. She recently showed off her prowess on "The Body Shocking Show" in England.
She inserts a wooden egg into her vagina and attaches the weight to the egg. She contracts her muscles around the egg and lifts the poundage. The 40-something Russian mom says in the video it has taken her 20 years to become so powerful in her nether region.
She reportedly set the vagina weightlifting record by hoisting 31 pounds in 2009. Afterward she was quoted as saying, “It’s enough to exercise your vagina five minutes a day, ladies, and in just one week you’ll be able to give yourself and your man unforgettable pleasure in bed.
Sunday, 10 March 2013
Man sues clinic for impregnating ex-girlfriend with his sperm
A man from Louisiana, Layne Hardin, is attempting to sue a fertility clinic after accusing his ex-girlfriend of stealing his stored gametes. Hardin has alleged that former partner Tobie Devall ‘bluffed’ her way into obtaining two vials of his sperm, which she was inseminated with.
As well as seeking damages from the clinic – Texas Andrology Services – and its owner Obstetrical and Gynecological Associate – for allowing his gametes to be used without his consent, Hardin hopes that his case will bring about a change in the law that would prevent this scenario from recurring. Devall is also named in the lawsuit.
A story published in Bio News said Hardin and a previous partner from over 10 years ago, Katherine LeBlanc, had originally decided to store some of his sperm before he was due to undergo a vasectomy. They already had a son together and though Hardin was due to be sterilised after the birth, they decided to store eight samples of his gametes at the Houston fertility clinic before his operation should they want to conceive another child in the future.
The clinic had a contract in place with Hardin and LeBlanc, which in the event of their separation instructed that LeBlanc would be given control of the gametes to use at her discretion, the lawsuit claims.
The couple ended their relationship in 2006 and Hardin began to date Tobie Devall, the lawsuit continues. During their time together, the couple visited the same clinic for advice on conception, with Duvall apparently aware that her partner already had sperm stored there. However, they broke up in 2009.
The lawsuit alleges that without authorisation to do so, Duvall used Hardin’s gametes to become pregnant and gave birth to a boy in 2010. His contract with the fertility clinic had made the sperm samples available for use only by LeBlanc; and the lawsuit accordingly claims that his contract with the clinic was broken.
Hardin has been established as the biological father of the child. Accordingly, his lawyer states that Devall could claim for child support and possibly part of Hardin’s inheritance under the current law. His lawyer, Cade Benson, described the child as ‘an innocent victim’ and his situation as ‘a controversial way to come into being’. He went on to say that the case is ‘like a soap opera, but it’s real’.
Conversely, Devall’s lawyer denies the claims and says Hardin is a ‘money grubber’ who is pursuing the case for cash from the clinic and Duvall’s family, whom he knows to be wealthy. He also states that ‘a lot of the allegations in the petition are not factually accurate and have no evidence to back them up’.
In 2011, a man sued a US fertility clinic for negligence for allowing his ex-girlfriend to gave birth to twins using his sperm, believed to have been obtained from a used condom, without his consent. The clinic denied the allegations calling the lawsuit ‘suspect’ and ‘disingenuous’. Trial is due to begin in April.
As well as seeking damages from the clinic – Texas Andrology Services – and its owner Obstetrical and Gynecological Associate – for allowing his gametes to be used without his consent, Hardin hopes that his case will bring about a change in the law that would prevent this scenario from recurring. Devall is also named in the lawsuit.
A story published in Bio News said Hardin and a previous partner from over 10 years ago, Katherine LeBlanc, had originally decided to store some of his sperm before he was due to undergo a vasectomy. They already had a son together and though Hardin was due to be sterilised after the birth, they decided to store eight samples of his gametes at the Houston fertility clinic before his operation should they want to conceive another child in the future.
The clinic had a contract in place with Hardin and LeBlanc, which in the event of their separation instructed that LeBlanc would be given control of the gametes to use at her discretion, the lawsuit claims.
The couple ended their relationship in 2006 and Hardin began to date Tobie Devall, the lawsuit continues. During their time together, the couple visited the same clinic for advice on conception, with Duvall apparently aware that her partner already had sperm stored there. However, they broke up in 2009.
The lawsuit alleges that without authorisation to do so, Duvall used Hardin’s gametes to become pregnant and gave birth to a boy in 2010. His contract with the fertility clinic had made the sperm samples available for use only by LeBlanc; and the lawsuit accordingly claims that his contract with the clinic was broken.
Hardin has been established as the biological father of the child. Accordingly, his lawyer states that Devall could claim for child support and possibly part of Hardin’s inheritance under the current law. His lawyer, Cade Benson, described the child as ‘an innocent victim’ and his situation as ‘a controversial way to come into being’. He went on to say that the case is ‘like a soap opera, but it’s real’.
Conversely, Devall’s lawyer denies the claims and says Hardin is a ‘money grubber’ who is pursuing the case for cash from the clinic and Duvall’s family, whom he knows to be wealthy. He also states that ‘a lot of the allegations in the petition are not factually accurate and have no evidence to back them up’.
In 2011, a man sued a US fertility clinic for negligence for allowing his ex-girlfriend to gave birth to twins using his sperm, believed to have been obtained from a used condom, without his consent. The clinic denied the allegations calling the lawsuit ‘suspect’ and ‘disingenuous’. Trial is due to begin in April.
Saturday, 9 March 2013
How Soldiers Killed My husband, Joy –Widow
The marriage between Mr. Wagley Dauda and his wife, Nankyer, would have been two years old on April 30 this year. They lived in the suburb of Jenta Adamu. Their one-room-and-parlour apartment is located in the heart of the suburb, towards the end of the ‘Konta’ (the tarred road), as it is referred to. The house is located on low land area. To access it, one will have to walk down a number of steps carved on rock. As one descends, one is faced with four doors leading into different apartments. One of them belongs to the couple. They had lived happily together in that humble abode because, according to Nankyer, they had serious plans and hope.
The marriage is blessed with an eleven-month-old son. Thirty-three-year old Wagley was a security officer at University of Jos and from what he earned, he saw his wife through her HND programme in secretariat studies at Plateau State Polytechnic. The plan was that, as soon as his wife was done with her studies, he would enrol in an evening school and rewrite his O’ level papers. He hoped to get into the university to read a course that would improve his status and gradually get them much better life, including accommodation. But that hope was dashed on February 17, 2013 when Wagley was gunned down at Old Airport Junction in Jos. He had boarded a cab to go to work while returning from funeral service of a village member. The gunshot was meant for the driver of the cab who had taken a wrong lane because of traffic hold-up.
The bullet touched the driver by the shoulder but went right into Mr. Dauda’s chest. He was trying to get out of the vehicle, but it was too late. He was rushed to hospital, but before anything could be done to save his life, he gave up the ghost. According to his wife, Nankyer who sat in the midst of her friends as they paid her condolence visit, “In the morning we left together for burial at Bukuru. The church service was for late David who came from the same village with my husband. It was held at Pandam COCIN church. After the church service, we left the church together in a bus and when we reached the main road, he came down from the bus to join a cab to go to work. The service ended around 10.O’clock. He said he would not be able to get to the village with us in Mangu because of his work.
We had not reached the village when we got a phone call that we should turn back to Jos and drive straight to Air Force military hospital because there has been an accident involving my husband. “It was when we got to the hospital that we were told that it was a gunshot. At the military hospital, he was transferred to Jos University Teaching Hospital where he finally gave up. The military men were with us until he finally gave up. I learnt his corpse was later taken back to the military hospital. It was from there he was conveyed days later for burial in his hometown in Bokkos.” Acording to his wife, there was no premonition that something untoward was in the offing earlier in the day. Her husband was “his usual self, there was nothing unusual about him the day he died. My husband was not a troublemaker.
His biological parents are late but he has other siblings. My husband started work with UNIJOS just before our wedding in 2011. Since the incident, I have not seen anybody from the Military or the STF since we parted at the hospital. But his colleagues from the university have been coming here on condolence visits,” the young widow mourned. With the breadwinner of the family gone, 30-year-old Nankyer confessed with tears rolling down her cheeks that the future now looks bleak. Her greatest fear is how to bring up the innocent boy who is too young to understand what has happened. “He is too young to ask questions, even though he feels his absence. He has not been his usual self since the incident occurred.
He does not play, he cries a lot and does not sleep well,” she said of her son. Nankyer, whose parents live in Mangu, said they are not capable of adding her responsibility to theirs. She stays alone in their home in Jenta Adamu; except for her elder sister who is staying with her and would remain until she is strong enough to stay alone. Though her late husband had about nine siblings, she knows all of them are battling with their own responsibilities to be able to add hers to theirs. “We depended on my husband for our livelihood; he lost his mother while he was in secondary school; at least he had reached somewhere before she dies but the same cannot be said for Samuel,” she said. Meanwhile the Special Task Force (STF) says the soldier, who shot Mr. Dauda, is still facing a board of enquiry set up to look into the case. The STF spokesman, Capt. Salisu Mustapha maintained that when the investigation is completed, the military will then know what to do.
The marriage is blessed with an eleven-month-old son. Thirty-three-year old Wagley was a security officer at University of Jos and from what he earned, he saw his wife through her HND programme in secretariat studies at Plateau State Polytechnic. The plan was that, as soon as his wife was done with her studies, he would enrol in an evening school and rewrite his O’ level papers. He hoped to get into the university to read a course that would improve his status and gradually get them much better life, including accommodation. But that hope was dashed on February 17, 2013 when Wagley was gunned down at Old Airport Junction in Jos. He had boarded a cab to go to work while returning from funeral service of a village member. The gunshot was meant for the driver of the cab who had taken a wrong lane because of traffic hold-up.
The bullet touched the driver by the shoulder but went right into Mr. Dauda’s chest. He was trying to get out of the vehicle, but it was too late. He was rushed to hospital, but before anything could be done to save his life, he gave up the ghost. According to his wife, Nankyer who sat in the midst of her friends as they paid her condolence visit, “In the morning we left together for burial at Bukuru. The church service was for late David who came from the same village with my husband. It was held at Pandam COCIN church. After the church service, we left the church together in a bus and when we reached the main road, he came down from the bus to join a cab to go to work. The service ended around 10.O’clock. He said he would not be able to get to the village with us in Mangu because of his work.
We had not reached the village when we got a phone call that we should turn back to Jos and drive straight to Air Force military hospital because there has been an accident involving my husband. “It was when we got to the hospital that we were told that it was a gunshot. At the military hospital, he was transferred to Jos University Teaching Hospital where he finally gave up. The military men were with us until he finally gave up. I learnt his corpse was later taken back to the military hospital. It was from there he was conveyed days later for burial in his hometown in Bokkos.” Acording to his wife, there was no premonition that something untoward was in the offing earlier in the day. Her husband was “his usual self, there was nothing unusual about him the day he died. My husband was not a troublemaker.
His biological parents are late but he has other siblings. My husband started work with UNIJOS just before our wedding in 2011. Since the incident, I have not seen anybody from the Military or the STF since we parted at the hospital. But his colleagues from the university have been coming here on condolence visits,” the young widow mourned. With the breadwinner of the family gone, 30-year-old Nankyer confessed with tears rolling down her cheeks that the future now looks bleak. Her greatest fear is how to bring up the innocent boy who is too young to understand what has happened. “He is too young to ask questions, even though he feels his absence. He has not been his usual self since the incident occurred.
He does not play, he cries a lot and does not sleep well,” she said of her son. Nankyer, whose parents live in Mangu, said they are not capable of adding her responsibility to theirs. She stays alone in their home in Jenta Adamu; except for her elder sister who is staying with her and would remain until she is strong enough to stay alone. Though her late husband had about nine siblings, she knows all of them are battling with their own responsibilities to be able to add hers to theirs. “We depended on my husband for our livelihood; he lost his mother while he was in secondary school; at least he had reached somewhere before she dies but the same cannot be said for Samuel,” she said. Meanwhile the Special Task Force (STF) says the soldier, who shot Mr. Dauda, is still facing a board of enquiry set up to look into the case. The STF spokesman, Capt. Salisu Mustapha maintained that when the investigation is completed, the military will then know what to do.
PHOTOS: First Photos From 2Face & Annie Idibia's Traditional Wedding
The traditional wedding ceremony of African queen Crooner, 2face Idibia and his wife, Annie Macaulay is currently ongoing in Uyo.
Several Celebs are presently in Uyo for the wedding ceremony.
See more photos below
Several Celebs are presently in Uyo for the wedding ceremony.
See more photos below
37-Year-Old Worker Arrested After Stealing N13 Million Worth Of Recharge Cards
A 37-year old worker, Lukman Aminu, has been arraigned before the Ijesha tedo Magistrate’s Court, Lagos State, southwest Nigeria, for allegedly stealing his company’s recharge cards worth N13.4 million.
Aminu was accused of conspiring with Tunde Martins, who is now on the run, to steal Etisalat, Airtel and Globacom recharge cards belonging to the company.
Aminu was allegedly caught by the company’s accountant when he could not pay the money for the recharge cards as at when due.
It was learnt that the case was reported to the police at Ijeshatedo division and Aminu and Martins were arrested. But Martins fled when he was granted bail.
Aminu was charged with stealing under the Criminal Code Law of Lagos State.
When Aminu was arraigned in court, he pleaded not guilty.
Narrating what happened, Aminu said he was the company’s representative at Airways branch in Lagos and sold the cards on credict to Martins but he failed to pay him.
Aminu admitted that the company warned them not sell on credit, but sold on credit to Martins because he was his good customer.
He said the company complicated the issue when it declared the recharge cards stolen.
The presiding Magistrate, Mrs A O Gbajumo, granted him bail in the sum of N200, 000 with two sureties in ike sum.
The matter was adjourned till 29 April.
Meanwhile, Martins’ surety, Nurani Olanrewaju, has been arrested and charged to court for perversion of justice for failing to produce Martins for prosecution as he promised.
Olanrewaju lamented that Martins, who is his in-law, refused to show up despite all his efforts to contact him.
Aminu was accused of conspiring with Tunde Martins, who is now on the run, to steal Etisalat, Airtel and Globacom recharge cards belonging to the company.
Aminu was allegedly caught by the company’s accountant when he could not pay the money for the recharge cards as at when due.
It was learnt that the case was reported to the police at Ijeshatedo division and Aminu and Martins were arrested. But Martins fled when he was granted bail.
Aminu was charged with stealing under the Criminal Code Law of Lagos State.
When Aminu was arraigned in court, he pleaded not guilty.
Narrating what happened, Aminu said he was the company’s representative at Airways branch in Lagos and sold the cards on credict to Martins but he failed to pay him.
Aminu admitted that the company warned them not sell on credit, but sold on credit to Martins because he was his good customer.
He said the company complicated the issue when it declared the recharge cards stolen.
The presiding Magistrate, Mrs A O Gbajumo, granted him bail in the sum of N200, 000 with two sureties in ike sum.
The matter was adjourned till 29 April.
Meanwhile, Martins’ surety, Nurani Olanrewaju, has been arrested and charged to court for perversion of justice for failing to produce Martins for prosecution as he promised.
Olanrewaju lamented that Martins, who is his in-law, refused to show up despite all his efforts to contact him.
Nigerian Police Nab Alleged Mushin Gang Leader
A suspected Mushin robbery gang leader, Shakiru Sanni, 31, a.k.a. Osama bin Laden, has been arrested by the operatives at the Federal Special Anti-Robbery Squad, FSARS, at Adeniji Adele Road, Lagos Island, southwest Nigeria.
According to the police, Sanni, who has been arraigned in court and remanded in prison custody, has been on the run since 2009 after he allegedly led others now in prison custody to rob and kill four persons.
The suspect was arraigned before an Igbosere magistrate’s court on a 6-count charge of felony to wit, armed robbery, murder, terrorising victims and unlawful possession of firearms.
Investigation by the police revealed that the accused, who had been on the wanted list of the police for the past three years, was arrested for allegedly killing four persons and robbing others.
Some of the gang’s victims, the police said, included a 9-year girl identified as Lateef Aminat who was killed on 7 December, 2010; Shina Ajah, shot dead on 22 September, 2010, and Adedeji Adenuga who was killed on 22 February, 2009.
The police further stated that Sanni was mentioned as the leader of the Mushin robbery gang by Lukmon Lawal a.k.a. Oko and Monsuru Ibrahim a.k.a. Danglish, now in prison custody for the same offences.
They revealed this during their interrogation by the police after they were arrested last year with one AK-47 rifle, one pump action shot gun and one AK-47 live bullet.
The police prosecutor, Supol Jayeoba Oloruntoba said the offences committed by the accused contravened sections 6 (b) of the robbery and firearms (special provisions) act laws of the federation of Nigeria 2004, and sections 231, 221, 401 (2) of the criminal laws of Lagos State 2011.
The plea of the accused was not taken because the court lacks the jurisdiction to try the matter. The magistrate, Mrs. O.O.A. Fowowe ordered that the accused be remanded in prison custody pending the advice from the office of the directorate of public prosecution, DPP, on the matter.
She adjourned the case for mention.
The suspect was arraigned before an Igbosere magistrate’s court on a 6-count charge of felony to wit, armed robbery, murder, terrorising victims and unlawful possession of firearms.
Investigation by the police revealed that the accused, who had been on the wanted list of the police for the past three years, was arrested for allegedly killing four persons and robbing others.
Some of the gang’s victims, the police said, included a 9-year girl identified as Lateef Aminat who was killed on 7 December, 2010; Shina Ajah, shot dead on 22 September, 2010, and Adedeji Adenuga who was killed on 22 February, 2009.
The police further stated that Sanni was mentioned as the leader of the Mushin robbery gang by Lukmon Lawal a.k.a. Oko and Monsuru Ibrahim a.k.a. Danglish, now in prison custody for the same offences.
They revealed this during their interrogation by the police after they were arrested last year with one AK-47 rifle, one pump action shot gun and one AK-47 live bullet.
The police prosecutor, Supol Jayeoba Oloruntoba said the offences committed by the accused contravened sections 6 (b) of the robbery and firearms (special provisions) act laws of the federation of Nigeria 2004, and sections 231, 221, 401 (2) of the criminal laws of Lagos State 2011.
The plea of the accused was not taken because the court lacks the jurisdiction to try the matter. The magistrate, Mrs. O.O.A. Fowowe ordered that the accused be remanded in prison custody pending the advice from the office of the directorate of public prosecution, DPP, on the matter.
She adjourned the case for mention.
Nigeria Can’t Trace Sponsors Of Ghost Workers That Defraud Government Of N100 Billion - Okonjo-Iweala
The Nigerian government has been unable to trace any of its officials responsible for introducing about 45,000 ghost workers into the government’s payroll that cost the nation over N100 billion, the Minister of Finance, Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, has said.
Mrs. Okonjo-Iweala said this in Abuja on Thursday during a media briefing on the 2013 budget.
Her colleague, Yerima Ngama, the Minister of State for Finance, had said last month that the federal government discovered over 45,000 ghost workers on its payroll after auditing 153,019 government workers.
The audit was executed in January on 215 Ministries, Departments, and Agencies, MDAs, of the Federal Government.
“What we have done so far, we have covered 215 MDAs and we have discovered 45,000 ghost workers and that has reduced the total bill by about N100 billion,’’ Mr. Ngama said.
A month after Mr. Ngama made the statement, no official has been held responsible for the fraud.
Unable to catch fraudsters
While responding to a PREMIUM TIMES enquiry during the media briefing, the finance minister said the government was still trying to identify the culprits.
“We haven’t caught anybody. I can’t tell you that today we have one person yet,” Mrs. Okonjo-Iweala said. “But, it is something that is exercising our minds that if we are getting this, we must try to trace how some of these things are entering. If we don’t, they may enter again.”
The Minister appealed to journalists and Nigerians to suggest ways of identifying the officials responsible for the fraud.
“It’s something we have been thinking about how to get to. So, if you have any ideas of how people do this, please share with us. We are open to information,” Mrs. Okonjo-Iweala said.
She said the government was baffled about how the names of the ghost workers always manage to get into the pay systems of the MDAs.
“It may be a little difficult to identify who has actually put the names of the ghost workers in the system,” Mrs. Okonjo-Iweala said. “We (federal government) cannot verify the details of the person, because there is no biometric information. What is obvious is that there is someone there who is not real. But how their names got into the system, from which MDA (ministry, department or agency) they came is a little more difficult to trace.”
The minister said the federal government “hears stories of certain officers in the ministries slotting in names for themselves.”
“But how to ascertain that is something that is not very easy. What we have been asking ourselves is: How do we figure out who put in those names, so that they can be dealt with? It is a task that government has,” she said.
She explained that the government was working with some forensic auditors to find ways of resolving the problem; adding that periodic forensic audits and checks would continue to rid the system of the ghost workers.
Mrs. Okonjo-Iweala said this in Abuja on Thursday during a media briefing on the 2013 budget.
Her colleague, Yerima Ngama, the Minister of State for Finance, had said last month that the federal government discovered over 45,000 ghost workers on its payroll after auditing 153,019 government workers.
The audit was executed in January on 215 Ministries, Departments, and Agencies, MDAs, of the Federal Government.
“What we have done so far, we have covered 215 MDAs and we have discovered 45,000 ghost workers and that has reduced the total bill by about N100 billion,’’ Mr. Ngama said.
A month after Mr. Ngama made the statement, no official has been held responsible for the fraud.
Unable to catch fraudsters
While responding to a PREMIUM TIMES enquiry during the media briefing, the finance minister said the government was still trying to identify the culprits.
“We haven’t caught anybody. I can’t tell you that today we have one person yet,” Mrs. Okonjo-Iweala said. “But, it is something that is exercising our minds that if we are getting this, we must try to trace how some of these things are entering. If we don’t, they may enter again.”
The Minister appealed to journalists and Nigerians to suggest ways of identifying the officials responsible for the fraud.
“It’s something we have been thinking about how to get to. So, if you have any ideas of how people do this, please share with us. We are open to information,” Mrs. Okonjo-Iweala said.
She said the government was baffled about how the names of the ghost workers always manage to get into the pay systems of the MDAs.
“It may be a little difficult to identify who has actually put the names of the ghost workers in the system,” Mrs. Okonjo-Iweala said. “We (federal government) cannot verify the details of the person, because there is no biometric information. What is obvious is that there is someone there who is not real. But how their names got into the system, from which MDA (ministry, department or agency) they came is a little more difficult to trace.”
The minister said the federal government “hears stories of certain officers in the ministries slotting in names for themselves.”
“But how to ascertain that is something that is not very easy. What we have been asking ourselves is: How do we figure out who put in those names, so that they can be dealt with? It is a task that government has,” she said.
She explained that the government was working with some forensic auditors to find ways of resolving the problem; adding that periodic forensic audits and checks would continue to rid the system of the ghost workers.
Why Most Nigerian Students Including Those From Wealthy Homes Have A Sugar Daddy
This question is as old and worn out as time itself. Yet still, nobody seems to be able to come up with a definite answer for it.
Really,Why do most Nigerian students (including those from wealthy homes) either have sugar daddies OR engage in prostitution? I took time out to ask some people around me this question and here are some of their responses.
“its greed of course! Greed, laziness, peer pressure, no ambition! Mutsheeeeew!!!”LOL sounds like he has been a victim of these girls.
“Because their parents don’t give them all the cash they need”
“Money, peer pressure” hmmmm yet again
Yet another person “MONEY! Peer pressure too.” I then replied “if that’s the main reason, why can’t they ask their parents, guidance e.t.c or get a decent job?” His response; “ooh! You’ll tell your parents you want bold5 today, they would drop the money. Less than two months after that, you want an iphone then later you want S3…you want to go for this show or that trip, you want to buy vuitton this Gucci that…and you expect them to give you the money every time. Naaaaa! Those girls do it for more money.” *phew* that was a long speech but he really did break it down don’t you think.
Do you think that explanation justifies the act? What about their reputation? Keeping themselves for their future husbands or wives, the marriages they are ruining due to the so-called greediness? What happened to being patient and contended with what you have? The questions are endless.
If you think you know the answer to this myth of a question, I really would like to hear from you because I must say ‘I’m baffled’.
Really,Why do most Nigerian students (including those from wealthy homes) either have sugar daddies OR engage in prostitution? I took time out to ask some people around me this question and here are some of their responses.
“its greed of course! Greed, laziness, peer pressure, no ambition! Mutsheeeeew!!!”LOL sounds like he has been a victim of these girls.
“Because their parents don’t give them all the cash they need”
“Money, peer pressure” hmmmm yet again
Yet another person “MONEY! Peer pressure too.” I then replied “if that’s the main reason, why can’t they ask their parents, guidance e.t.c or get a decent job?” His response; “ooh! You’ll tell your parents you want bold5 today, they would drop the money. Less than two months after that, you want an iphone then later you want S3…you want to go for this show or that trip, you want to buy vuitton this Gucci that…and you expect them to give you the money every time. Naaaaa! Those girls do it for more money.” *phew* that was a long speech but he really did break it down don’t you think.
Do you think that explanation justifies the act? What about their reputation? Keeping themselves for their future husbands or wives, the marriages they are ruining due to the so-called greediness? What happened to being patient and contended with what you have? The questions are endless.
If you think you know the answer to this myth of a question, I really would like to hear from you because I must say ‘I’m baffled’.
NNPC Manager Arraigned Over N285.2 Million Fraud
A former depot supervisor of Total Nigeria Plc, Emmanuel Abulude, was Friday arraigned by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC, before an Ikeja high court for allegedly stealing petroleum products worth N285.2 million.
The former oil company official was charged on a one-count charge of stealing by fraudulent conversion before Justice Lateefa Okunnu with his company, Emmanbyink Ventures Limited.
Abulude was alleged to have obtained the sum of N285.2 million representing the proceeds of 92 trucks of petroleum products between September 2011 and January 2012 .
As a depot supervisor at the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, NNPC, Mosimi, Lagos, the defendant was accused of failure to remit the sum to his employers.
According to him, Abulude’s alleged offence contravene Section 285 (9)(b) of the Criminal Laws of Lagos State 2011.
He however pleaded not guilty to the charge.
Ruling on his bail application, Justice Okunnu granted him bail in the sum of N20 million with two sureties in like sum, while making it mandatory for the sureties to be gainfully employed and resident in Lagos State.
She said one of the surety must own a property of substantial value in Lagos State while the other surety must be a blood relative of the defendant. She further ruled that the sureties are to produce evidence of three years tax clearance payable to the Lagos State Government, as she ordered the defendant to report once in a month at the EFCC office in Lagos throughout the duration of the case. The matter was adjourned to June 5 for trial.
The former oil company official was charged on a one-count charge of stealing by fraudulent conversion before Justice Lateefa Okunnu with his company, Emmanbyink Ventures Limited.
Abulude was alleged to have obtained the sum of N285.2 million representing the proceeds of 92 trucks of petroleum products between September 2011 and January 2012 .
As a depot supervisor at the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, NNPC, Mosimi, Lagos, the defendant was accused of failure to remit the sum to his employers.
According to him, Abulude’s alleged offence contravene Section 285 (9)(b) of the Criminal Laws of Lagos State 2011.
He however pleaded not guilty to the charge.
Ruling on his bail application, Justice Okunnu granted him bail in the sum of N20 million with two sureties in like sum, while making it mandatory for the sureties to be gainfully employed and resident in Lagos State.
She said one of the surety must own a property of substantial value in Lagos State while the other surety must be a blood relative of the defendant. She further ruled that the sureties are to produce evidence of three years tax clearance payable to the Lagos State Government, as she ordered the defendant to report once in a month at the EFCC office in Lagos throughout the duration of the case. The matter was adjourned to June 5 for trial.
Man Burns 13-Year-Old Girl With Hot Knife For Stealing Sachet Milk
The human right department of the Ojo police division has arraigned a 40- year-old man before the Ojo Magistrate’s Court on a two- count charge of using hot knife to inflict injuries on a 13-year- old girl after accusing her of stealing a sachet milk.
Inieke David who hails from Abak Local Government of Akwa Ibom State, was allegedly reported to the police by staff of L.A Nursery and Primary School in Ojo local Government area for using a hot iron to inflict injuries on his niece accusing her of stealing milk.
The victim reportedly collected milk from her classmates after her uncle’s wife refused to give her food only for the woman to later inform her husband that she caught Blessing stealing milk from a retailer’s shop. David who didn’t ask questions after hearing from his wife, allegedly put a knife on a burning stove, tied up Blessing with a wrapper and inflicted injuries on her.
The suspect was also said to have allegedly chased her out of the house. It was gathered that good Samaritans from Ojo community reported his action to Ojo Local Government Secretariat and he was handed over to the police for proper investigation.
Neighbours said the victim who has been living with her uncle for the past three years was brought from the village to be trained in school and also assist her uncle’s wife in her household chores only to be maltreated and starved several times.
Magistrate Shomade going through the charges against David ordered that he should be remanded at the kirikiri Prison while the case was transferred to the family court in Apapa for further hearing.
Inieke David who hails from Abak Local Government of Akwa Ibom State, was allegedly reported to the police by staff of L.A Nursery and Primary School in Ojo local Government area for using a hot iron to inflict injuries on his niece accusing her of stealing milk.
The victim reportedly collected milk from her classmates after her uncle’s wife refused to give her food only for the woman to later inform her husband that she caught Blessing stealing milk from a retailer’s shop. David who didn’t ask questions after hearing from his wife, allegedly put a knife on a burning stove, tied up Blessing with a wrapper and inflicted injuries on her.
The suspect was also said to have allegedly chased her out of the house. It was gathered that good Samaritans from Ojo community reported his action to Ojo Local Government Secretariat and he was handed over to the police for proper investigation.
Neighbours said the victim who has been living with her uncle for the past three years was brought from the village to be trained in school and also assist her uncle’s wife in her household chores only to be maltreated and starved several times.
Magistrate Shomade going through the charges against David ordered that he should be remanded at the kirikiri Prison while the case was transferred to the family court in Apapa for further hearing.
Obama Brother Flops In Kenyan Election
Malik Obama, the 54-year-old half-brother of U.S. President, Barack Obama, failed miserably in his effort to get elected as a governor in Western Kenya as results on Friday showed that he received just 1 per cent of the votes cast in his constituency.
The Kenyan accountant, who ran as an independent, garnered just 694 votes in a race with over 55,000 ballots cast in Siaya County. The winner was William Odhiambo Oduol, with 56 per cent of the vote.
The two Obamas share the same father but have different mothers. Malik ran on a campaign of “change,’’ echoing his younger brother’s slogans of hope and change in the 2008 U.S. presidential election.
According to Malik Obama, the last time he spoke to his brother was after the U.S. elections, when the latter promised to visit Kenya if the elections were fair and transparent.
Many Kenyans were disappointed that Barack Obama did not visit during his first term. In 2009, Obama’s first trip to Africa was to Ghana. Barack Obama last visited Kenya in 2006, when he was a senator.
The two Obamas share the same father but have different mothers. Malik ran on a campaign of “change,’’ echoing his younger brother’s slogans of hope and change in the 2008 U.S. presidential election.
According to Malik Obama, the last time he spoke to his brother was after the U.S. elections, when the latter promised to visit Kenya if the elections were fair and transparent.
Many Kenyans were disappointed that Barack Obama did not visit during his first term. In 2009, Obama’s first trip to Africa was to Ghana. Barack Obama last visited Kenya in 2006, when he was a senator.
Celibacy: Should Priests Marry Or Not?
The sex abuse crisis and massive cover up by top hierarchy of the church are so much that the situation currently, has put Catholicism in dire strait.
The vow of celibacy can roughly be attributed or traced to sex scandals involving some insignificant segment of the priesthood. Catholic priests are required to be celibate – not married and not having sex.
To US Emeritus Archbishop, Cardinal Theodara McCarrick, Celibacy is important in the life of the priest, allowing him to fully dedicate himself to God.
Early in his pontificate, Benedict XVI had asserted that traditional protestantism is in “profound crisis,”that evangelicalism owes its popularity to a “certainty” which derives from its willingness to settle for a “minimum faith,”and that although Catholicism isn’t in such bad shape,”the West is a world that is tired of its own culture that has arrived at a time in which there’s no more evidence of the need for God, much less Christ, and in which it seems that man alone can make himself.”
Benedict also challenged a phenomenon in which late Pope John Paul often reveled – the explosion of priestly vocations in the developing world, which he said sometimes owed less to faith than the seminarians’ quest for material gain and social promotion in their villages.
Saturday Vanguard checks showed that there is shortage of priests especially for the local church as parents are reluctant to enroll their boys in the seminary due to the age-long celibacy policy of the Catholic church.
And many young men who entered the seminary to train as priests dropped out before ordination, lured away by filial and sexual temptations. So too are young girls going into the convent to become nuns and reverend sisters unable to cope with challenges of chastity.
A bishop once went hard on the congregation for not allowing their sons to join the priesthood saying: “you want priests in the church, but refused your children to be trained as priests. We need more priests in the Lord’s vineyard.”
Only few people understand that the priesthood is a calling from God, hence those who are there should completely submit their lives to the service of God especially in Catholicism – no wife, no children, no marital obligations or worldly material desires.
Rev Father Fabian Anele of our Lady of Fatima Catholic Church, Choba, Port Harcourt, when contacted on phone, directed this writer to some sources which explained what celibacy is all about.
Ordinarily, celibacy refers to a state of being unmarried and sexual abstinence, usually associated with the role of religious official or devotee.
In its narrow sense, the term is applied only to those to whom the unmarried is the result of sacred vow, act of renunciation or religious conviction.
It has existed in one form or another throughout history and in virtually all the major religions in the world, such as Christianity, Buddhism, Brahma Kumaris, to mention a few.
Celibacy is distinct from the lack of interest in sex, which may be due to a number of reasons such as asexuality.
The word celibacy derives from the Latin caelibatus, state of being unmarried, again from Latin caelebs, meaning “Unmarried.” In the early church, higher clerics, even if they live in marriages, they are supposed to abstain from sexual intercourse with their wives.
In the early 3rd century, the canons of the Apostolic Constitution decreed that only lower clerics might still marry after their ordination, but marriage of bishops, priests and deacons were not allowed.
The first Conciliar document on celibacy of the Western Christian Church (Canon 33 of the Synod of Elvira, C. AD 305) states that the discipline of celibacy is to refrain from the use of marriage, that is refrain from having carnal contact with your spouse. In the Catholic Church, Orthodox or Oriental Orthodox traditions, bishops are required to be celibate. In the Eastern Christian traditions, Priests and Deacons are allowed to be married, yet have to celibate.
If they are unmarried at the time of ordination, celibacy is viewed differently by the Catholic Church and the various protestant communities. It includes clerical celibacy, celibacy of the consecrated life, voluntary lay celibacy and celibacy outside of marriage. The protestant Reformation rejected celibate life and sexual continence for preachers. A few minor Christian sects advocate celibacy as a better way of life.
Celibacy is not only for religious and monastics (Brothers/Monks and Sisters/Nuns), but also for bishops is upheld by the Catholic Church traditions.
Many evangelicals prefer the term abstinence”to “celibacy.”Assuming everyone will marry, they focus their discussions on refraining from premarital sex and focusing on the joys of a future marriage. But some evangelicals, especially older singles, desire a positive message of celibacy that moves beyond the “wait until marriage”message.
The vow of celibacy can roughly be attributed or traced to sex scandals involving some insignificant segment of the priesthood. Catholic priests are required to be celibate – not married and not having sex.
To US Emeritus Archbishop, Cardinal Theodara McCarrick, Celibacy is important in the life of the priest, allowing him to fully dedicate himself to God.
Early in his pontificate, Benedict XVI had asserted that traditional protestantism is in “profound crisis,”that evangelicalism owes its popularity to a “certainty” which derives from its willingness to settle for a “minimum faith,”and that although Catholicism isn’t in such bad shape,”the West is a world that is tired of its own culture that has arrived at a time in which there’s no more evidence of the need for God, much less Christ, and in which it seems that man alone can make himself.”
Benedict also challenged a phenomenon in which late Pope John Paul often reveled – the explosion of priestly vocations in the developing world, which he said sometimes owed less to faith than the seminarians’ quest for material gain and social promotion in their villages.
Saturday Vanguard checks showed that there is shortage of priests especially for the local church as parents are reluctant to enroll their boys in the seminary due to the age-long celibacy policy of the Catholic church.
And many young men who entered the seminary to train as priests dropped out before ordination, lured away by filial and sexual temptations. So too are young girls going into the convent to become nuns and reverend sisters unable to cope with challenges of chastity.
A bishop once went hard on the congregation for not allowing their sons to join the priesthood saying: “you want priests in the church, but refused your children to be trained as priests. We need more priests in the Lord’s vineyard.”
Only few people understand that the priesthood is a calling from God, hence those who are there should completely submit their lives to the service of God especially in Catholicism – no wife, no children, no marital obligations or worldly material desires.
Rev Father Fabian Anele of our Lady of Fatima Catholic Church, Choba, Port Harcourt, when contacted on phone, directed this writer to some sources which explained what celibacy is all about.
Ordinarily, celibacy refers to a state of being unmarried and sexual abstinence, usually associated with the role of religious official or devotee.
In its narrow sense, the term is applied only to those to whom the unmarried is the result of sacred vow, act of renunciation or religious conviction.
It has existed in one form or another throughout history and in virtually all the major religions in the world, such as Christianity, Buddhism, Brahma Kumaris, to mention a few.
Celibacy is distinct from the lack of interest in sex, which may be due to a number of reasons such as asexuality.
The word celibacy derives from the Latin caelibatus, state of being unmarried, again from Latin caelebs, meaning “Unmarried.” In the early church, higher clerics, even if they live in marriages, they are supposed to abstain from sexual intercourse with their wives.
In the early 3rd century, the canons of the Apostolic Constitution decreed that only lower clerics might still marry after their ordination, but marriage of bishops, priests and deacons were not allowed.
The first Conciliar document on celibacy of the Western Christian Church (Canon 33 of the Synod of Elvira, C. AD 305) states that the discipline of celibacy is to refrain from the use of marriage, that is refrain from having carnal contact with your spouse. In the Catholic Church, Orthodox or Oriental Orthodox traditions, bishops are required to be celibate. In the Eastern Christian traditions, Priests and Deacons are allowed to be married, yet have to celibate.
If they are unmarried at the time of ordination, celibacy is viewed differently by the Catholic Church and the various protestant communities. It includes clerical celibacy, celibacy of the consecrated life, voluntary lay celibacy and celibacy outside of marriage. The protestant Reformation rejected celibate life and sexual continence for preachers. A few minor Christian sects advocate celibacy as a better way of life.
Celibacy is not only for religious and monastics (Brothers/Monks and Sisters/Nuns), but also for bishops is upheld by the Catholic Church traditions.
Many evangelicals prefer the term abstinence”to “celibacy.”Assuming everyone will marry, they focus their discussions on refraining from premarital sex and focusing on the joys of a future marriage. But some evangelicals, especially older singles, desire a positive message of celibacy that moves beyond the “wait until marriage”message.
I Don’t Joke With Sex – Toyin-Kehinde
Convener, All Ladies Affairs, Business and Career Forum, Dr. Shade Toyin-Kehinde, speaks on challenges married women face in balancing their homes and careers in this interview with BOSEDE OLUSOLA-OBASA
How true is the saying that it takes a tough woman to break even in the business world?
It takes an ordinary woman to achieve the unachievable in whatever industry. But the difference between her and other ordinary women is that she is one backed by God and her spouse. It actually takes vision to excel. She is a focused woman, who brings business before pleasure. She is shrewd and organised. She pays herself rather than touch her capital. She lives within her means, she respects the core principles of business excellence and above all, she is socially responsible to her immediate environment and beyond. For instance, we give revolving loans to poor widows for business and take them through skills acquisition. I encourage women to go all out; there is no limitation at all.
But people say that women are the worst bosses to have?
That is a wrong notion. Women have this milk of kindness which comes to play from time to time. Men who complain about female bosses are perhaps those who want to take undue advantage of a prevailing situation. They feel they can get away with about anything; that is where the woman’s ‘hardness’ shows up. She puts her feet down and gets the results she set out to get. Some men think that the average woman doesn’t understand the game in the corporate world or that she is dull.
Is it ideal for women to resign to look after their homes?
If there is an agreement between her and her spouse, well. But I will not advise a woman to take that step; at the same time, I won’t say that a woman should disobey her husband. But I would plead with such men to note that her being employed may soon pay off. When perhaps the burden of running the home becomes too heavy on the man and it may be too late for the woman to return to the corporate world, she has become rusty – he has rendered her inadequate and handicapped in that area. That can eventually create tension at home. He starts putting up acts that show the woman that she is too domestic. I encourage that men who insist that their wives stay at home should pay her monthly as if she is going to the office. The amount should be close to what she was earning in her last job. For the woman, she should do things that will multiple that income and save for the rainy days. Engage in something profitable that still gives you good time for keeping the home. Frankly, these are days when it requires both spouses to work to keep the home running, especially when the children get to higher institutions and bills are rising. So people should look into tomorrow and empower their wives financially. In the real sense of the word, I don’t think there are still full-time housewives in Nigeria today. You don’t have to abandon your home to work, spend time with your family members and build healthy family units.
You are a career woman, how often do you cook?
Oh, I go to the kitchen everyday to cook. I celebrated my 20th wedding anniversary in February and for those 20 years, I have not had any other person cook for my husband or children. That is not because I can’t afford a house maid, but because I believe in managing my kitchen personally. I cook every day, breakfast, lunch, dinner. As a matter of fact, I have a day in the week dedicated to the kitchen. On that day, I overhaul my freezer; check my fridge to see what I need to restock. I do it on my own. Even as a banker, I did that in a way that it did not affect my job. I did it at the weekends. Currently, my weekends are the busiest, so I chose a day in the week when my schedule enables me to do so. I stay in the kitchen and fix as many things as possible such that I realise that I am good to go for the rest of the week. I can cook anything without visiting the market. I do that weekly. And I do another monthly overhaul of the freezer. The monthly schedule helps me stock the freezer with meat of all kinds of things in large quantities. My husband can call for any kind of meal and you are sure I have it. Many women need to be tutored in this area. Don’t leave your responsibility to the housemaid, nannies, grandma. It is easier for me now because I could do it as a banker. Those days, I did my large cooking at the weekend; packed them in plastic packs. It is not every day that people love to eat foods stored in the fridge, so sometimes on my way from work, I park my car and do some shopping. A woman should never be tired of the kitchen.
Which part of your house are you fond of?
Wow, wow, I am most fond of my bedroom.
Why?
That is where I enjoy the best fellowship that gives me the tonic to keep going. That is where I meet with a man to whom I can pour all my heart. That is where I get the best counsel, encouragement and prayer. I attach the most importance to my bedroom and of course I don’t joke with my sex life – it is an integral part of the fellowship that I am talking about. I know that marital bliss cannot be without sex. I tell business and career women not to joke with their sex life; and I practice what I preach.
As a banker, how receptive were you to sex?
Oh, let me set the records strait; I am busier now than when I was a banker; as a counsellor, pastor and one in a social responsibility sector. Then, as a banker, I had resumption and closing time, and when I had to call it a day and go home. But now, I could get calls at 3am on my duty as a pastor. Sometimes, I am at my desk here in the office till midnight, attending meetings. Sometimes, because of my busy schedule, I don’t have good sleep for three consecutive days. If I could manage my sex life then, it should be difficult now; but no, it is not. I have set things right. I tell married women at all kinds of fora that it is better not to marry than come into it and claim to be tied and unable to enjoy sex – you are courting trouble. There are so many mistresses out there willing to give it to your husband. Let me share a personal secret: when you are tired, that is the time to have sex. It will cool you down, that is the design of sex. It puts your body back when it is about to give way. That is the best sleeping pill – the right sex, with the right man – your husband. When you feel really tired, have a good shower, relax in your bed beside your husband, let him rub your back, you rub his and before you know it, you are there and you will feel really refreshed. I have practised it and I know it. It also cements relationships and settles quarrels.
Are you saying that in 20 years you have never said no to your husband?
Hmmm, there has been no time that my no was outright. I have had to say no only to find out that I have yielded. Before I had this understanding, I, like other women, had the erroneous belief that sex further drains you when you are already tired. I have since learned not to say no; it doesn’t mean that I have sex every day. But on whatever platform I stand to teach around the world, I do say that for a healthy marriage, that a couple should not have any week without sex. When I see couples who quarrel on every little issue, I find out how their sexual life is; then I discover that they have not been there for two weeks, one month, two months. So not a week without sex please.
You talk as if it is automatic?
Well, there are factors that aid good sex. There shouldn’t be pressure. Some African men love to leave the roof burning and pretend nothing is happening. He knows the bills have not been paid, yet he wants to sleep with his wife whose mind is naturally on the unpaid bills. The woman is not in the right frame of mind for sex. So it is easy for her to say, ‘don’t touch me; let’s talk about the bills instead.’ If the man is not ready to talk about it, they stay off sex for as long as the issue is unresolved. This is for the men, ‘it is not the time that you want to go to bed with your wife that you remember your wife exists. Pay the bills; make life comfortable for your wife.’ That is why I can’t say no to my husband. He makes life comfortable for me, he doesn’t give me a headache about bills being paid, he pays attention to every detail and makes sure they are fixed, he gives me hope. In such a man, I can relax; he doesn’t wait till bedtime to tell me he loves me. Even in the midst of his schedule as prayer director of Lagos Chapter, Pentecostal Fellowship of Nigeria, among others, he still minds little details. He calls just to say, ‘I love you’; he knows I love ice cream and he buys it often. There is nothing he can’t do to help me, especially when I get home late at night – in the kitchen, in the shower, in the bedroom, we help each other. When a man is as good as that, he will enjoy his wife in every sense of the word. Some men say their wives don’t help them meet needs at home, but they don’t open up to their wives. I spoke to a widow who said she didn’t know her husband’s office address while he was alive.
How do you cope with office romance, sharing the same office apartment with your husband?
It is not affecting our work; rather, it helps us to work better. When we are at work, we should be focused. Office romance doesn’t have to be physical today. Social media has made the world absolutely without barriers and borders, but work hours should be given to working.
What can’t you resist?
The cry of a widow. I can give everything that I have to them. I love to look good but I don’t spend too much on those. I have carried this heart and commitment so hard that my children are also following me in it. I have had to sell off some expensive things I have to meet needs of the widow, missionaries and the less-privileged.
Your forum deals with issues about women balancing the demands of their homes and careers. Can you tell us more about it?
It is a forum where we spur women to become the best that they can be in their respective fields and endeavours and in turn, impact their world positively. I have come to discover that women have a lot to offer their homes, immediate environments, countries and the world. There is no limit to getting this done except in the African setting where their roles are played down. It is also interesting to note that apart from being looked down on by the public and the men, some women look down on themselves. Our role is to help such women in all sectors to get rid of that grasshopper mentality. That is the focus of the Business and Career Forum, which hosts women from all walks of life yearly. This year’s event comes up on March 9. The forum is hosted in March deliberately in commemoration of the International Day of Women.
What are the limitations women face?
From counselling, I realise that women set no-go areas for themselves. There is the phobia that the core business sectors cannot be taken over by women. The average woman with her level of education would rather run a massive departmental store, deal in jewellery or other accessories than think of going into manufacturing, for instance. And the men are not helping matters, because when they see a woman who dares to come close to the places otherwise thought to be the preserve of men, they are jolted. They put up an attitude that says, “We’ll rather have your husband here.” But I ask, “If a man falls into a river and the only person around to throw him a life jacket is a woman, will he prefer to die than take it from her?” The interesting point to add is that women who have dared to go there, excelled. Some women have the challenge of husbands who cannot bear to have them in public light. But that shouldn’t be, provided it doesn’t reduce commitment to the home front. So the women only need to be encouraged to strike a balance. Another challenge is that women can be impediments in the track of fellow women. Such attitudes should stop; we should be willing to serve as ladders for other women to rise.
It takes an ordinary woman to achieve the unachievable in whatever industry. But the difference between her and other ordinary women is that she is one backed by God and her spouse. It actually takes vision to excel. She is a focused woman, who brings business before pleasure. She is shrewd and organised. She pays herself rather than touch her capital. She lives within her means, she respects the core principles of business excellence and above all, she is socially responsible to her immediate environment and beyond. For instance, we give revolving loans to poor widows for business and take them through skills acquisition. I encourage women to go all out; there is no limitation at all.
But people say that women are the worst bosses to have?
That is a wrong notion. Women have this milk of kindness which comes to play from time to time. Men who complain about female bosses are perhaps those who want to take undue advantage of a prevailing situation. They feel they can get away with about anything; that is where the woman’s ‘hardness’ shows up. She puts her feet down and gets the results she set out to get. Some men think that the average woman doesn’t understand the game in the corporate world or that she is dull.
Is it ideal for women to resign to look after their homes?
If there is an agreement between her and her spouse, well. But I will not advise a woman to take that step; at the same time, I won’t say that a woman should disobey her husband. But I would plead with such men to note that her being employed may soon pay off. When perhaps the burden of running the home becomes too heavy on the man and it may be too late for the woman to return to the corporate world, she has become rusty – he has rendered her inadequate and handicapped in that area. That can eventually create tension at home. He starts putting up acts that show the woman that she is too domestic. I encourage that men who insist that their wives stay at home should pay her monthly as if she is going to the office. The amount should be close to what she was earning in her last job. For the woman, she should do things that will multiple that income and save for the rainy days. Engage in something profitable that still gives you good time for keeping the home. Frankly, these are days when it requires both spouses to work to keep the home running, especially when the children get to higher institutions and bills are rising. So people should look into tomorrow and empower their wives financially. In the real sense of the word, I don’t think there are still full-time housewives in Nigeria today. You don’t have to abandon your home to work, spend time with your family members and build healthy family units.
You are a career woman, how often do you cook?
Oh, I go to the kitchen everyday to cook. I celebrated my 20th wedding anniversary in February and for those 20 years, I have not had any other person cook for my husband or children. That is not because I can’t afford a house maid, but because I believe in managing my kitchen personally. I cook every day, breakfast, lunch, dinner. As a matter of fact, I have a day in the week dedicated to the kitchen. On that day, I overhaul my freezer; check my fridge to see what I need to restock. I do it on my own. Even as a banker, I did that in a way that it did not affect my job. I did it at the weekends. Currently, my weekends are the busiest, so I chose a day in the week when my schedule enables me to do so. I stay in the kitchen and fix as many things as possible such that I realise that I am good to go for the rest of the week. I can cook anything without visiting the market. I do that weekly. And I do another monthly overhaul of the freezer. The monthly schedule helps me stock the freezer with meat of all kinds of things in large quantities. My husband can call for any kind of meal and you are sure I have it. Many women need to be tutored in this area. Don’t leave your responsibility to the housemaid, nannies, grandma. It is easier for me now because I could do it as a banker. Those days, I did my large cooking at the weekend; packed them in plastic packs. It is not every day that people love to eat foods stored in the fridge, so sometimes on my way from work, I park my car and do some shopping. A woman should never be tired of the kitchen.
Which part of your house are you fond of?
Wow, wow, I am most fond of my bedroom.
Why?
That is where I enjoy the best fellowship that gives me the tonic to keep going. That is where I meet with a man to whom I can pour all my heart. That is where I get the best counsel, encouragement and prayer. I attach the most importance to my bedroom and of course I don’t joke with my sex life – it is an integral part of the fellowship that I am talking about. I know that marital bliss cannot be without sex. I tell business and career women not to joke with their sex life; and I practice what I preach.
As a banker, how receptive were you to sex?
Oh, let me set the records strait; I am busier now than when I was a banker; as a counsellor, pastor and one in a social responsibility sector. Then, as a banker, I had resumption and closing time, and when I had to call it a day and go home. But now, I could get calls at 3am on my duty as a pastor. Sometimes, I am at my desk here in the office till midnight, attending meetings. Sometimes, because of my busy schedule, I don’t have good sleep for three consecutive days. If I could manage my sex life then, it should be difficult now; but no, it is not. I have set things right. I tell married women at all kinds of fora that it is better not to marry than come into it and claim to be tied and unable to enjoy sex – you are courting trouble. There are so many mistresses out there willing to give it to your husband. Let me share a personal secret: when you are tired, that is the time to have sex. It will cool you down, that is the design of sex. It puts your body back when it is about to give way. That is the best sleeping pill – the right sex, with the right man – your husband. When you feel really tired, have a good shower, relax in your bed beside your husband, let him rub your back, you rub his and before you know it, you are there and you will feel really refreshed. I have practised it and I know it. It also cements relationships and settles quarrels.
Are you saying that in 20 years you have never said no to your husband?
Hmmm, there has been no time that my no was outright. I have had to say no only to find out that I have yielded. Before I had this understanding, I, like other women, had the erroneous belief that sex further drains you when you are already tired. I have since learned not to say no; it doesn’t mean that I have sex every day. But on whatever platform I stand to teach around the world, I do say that for a healthy marriage, that a couple should not have any week without sex. When I see couples who quarrel on every little issue, I find out how their sexual life is; then I discover that they have not been there for two weeks, one month, two months. So not a week without sex please.
You talk as if it is automatic?
Well, there are factors that aid good sex. There shouldn’t be pressure. Some African men love to leave the roof burning and pretend nothing is happening. He knows the bills have not been paid, yet he wants to sleep with his wife whose mind is naturally on the unpaid bills. The woman is not in the right frame of mind for sex. So it is easy for her to say, ‘don’t touch me; let’s talk about the bills instead.’ If the man is not ready to talk about it, they stay off sex for as long as the issue is unresolved. This is for the men, ‘it is not the time that you want to go to bed with your wife that you remember your wife exists. Pay the bills; make life comfortable for your wife.’ That is why I can’t say no to my husband. He makes life comfortable for me, he doesn’t give me a headache about bills being paid, he pays attention to every detail and makes sure they are fixed, he gives me hope. In such a man, I can relax; he doesn’t wait till bedtime to tell me he loves me. Even in the midst of his schedule as prayer director of Lagos Chapter, Pentecostal Fellowship of Nigeria, among others, he still minds little details. He calls just to say, ‘I love you’; he knows I love ice cream and he buys it often. There is nothing he can’t do to help me, especially when I get home late at night – in the kitchen, in the shower, in the bedroom, we help each other. When a man is as good as that, he will enjoy his wife in every sense of the word. Some men say their wives don’t help them meet needs at home, but they don’t open up to their wives. I spoke to a widow who said she didn’t know her husband’s office address while he was alive.
How do you cope with office romance, sharing the same office apartment with your husband?
It is not affecting our work; rather, it helps us to work better. When we are at work, we should be focused. Office romance doesn’t have to be physical today. Social media has made the world absolutely without barriers and borders, but work hours should be given to working.
What can’t you resist?
The cry of a widow. I can give everything that I have to them. I love to look good but I don’t spend too much on those. I have carried this heart and commitment so hard that my children are also following me in it. I have had to sell off some expensive things I have to meet needs of the widow, missionaries and the less-privileged.
Your forum deals with issues about women balancing the demands of their homes and careers. Can you tell us more about it?
It is a forum where we spur women to become the best that they can be in their respective fields and endeavours and in turn, impact their world positively. I have come to discover that women have a lot to offer their homes, immediate environments, countries and the world. There is no limit to getting this done except in the African setting where their roles are played down. It is also interesting to note that apart from being looked down on by the public and the men, some women look down on themselves. Our role is to help such women in all sectors to get rid of that grasshopper mentality. That is the focus of the Business and Career Forum, which hosts women from all walks of life yearly. This year’s event comes up on March 9. The forum is hosted in March deliberately in commemoration of the International Day of Women.
What are the limitations women face?
From counselling, I realise that women set no-go areas for themselves. There is the phobia that the core business sectors cannot be taken over by women. The average woman with her level of education would rather run a massive departmental store, deal in jewellery or other accessories than think of going into manufacturing, for instance. And the men are not helping matters, because when they see a woman who dares to come close to the places otherwise thought to be the preserve of men, they are jolted. They put up an attitude that says, “We’ll rather have your husband here.” But I ask, “If a man falls into a river and the only person around to throw him a life jacket is a woman, will he prefer to die than take it from her?” The interesting point to add is that women who have dared to go there, excelled. Some women have the challenge of husbands who cannot bear to have them in public light. But that shouldn’t be, provided it doesn’t reduce commitment to the home front. So the women only need to be encouraged to strike a balance. Another challenge is that women can be impediments in the track of fellow women. Such attitudes should stop; we should be willing to serve as ladders for other women to rise.
Nobody Is Above The Law: Obasanjo Visits FRSC To Collect Own Driver’s Licence
Former President, Chief Olusegun Obasanjo, has declared that nobody is above the law in the collective drive to ensure compliance with traffic rules and regulations in Nigeria.
Speaking after processing his driver’s license at the Abuja national headquarters of the Federal Road Safety Corps (FRSC), Chief Obasanjo said, “If I have to drive, I must have a valid driver’s license like others. That informed my visit. We should note that the driver’s licence serves other purposes beyond driving of a vehicle and also useful outside the country such as certification of somebody’s identity.”
He also said “anybody who wants to be law abiding must go through this process because you cannot be bigger than the law, no matter your political position or social status. You must pass through this process unless you are not ready to be law abiding”.
On the performance of the FRSC in the last 25 years, Obasanjo commended the agency for impacting positively on Nigerian road users but urgedit to redouble ongoing efforts on road safety management. He further advised drivers to pass through the necessary certification process for acquiring the driver’s license in order to reduce the spate of road crashes in the country.
Reacting, the FRSC Corps Marshal and Chief Executive, OsitaChidoka described the visit of Obasanjo to process his driver’s licence as a strong indicator that Nigeria has what it takes to be a country governed by law.
Speaking after processing his driver’s license at the Abuja national headquarters of the Federal Road Safety Corps (FRSC), Chief Obasanjo said, “If I have to drive, I must have a valid driver’s license like others. That informed my visit. We should note that the driver’s licence serves other purposes beyond driving of a vehicle and also useful outside the country such as certification of somebody’s identity.”
He also said “anybody who wants to be law abiding must go through this process because you cannot be bigger than the law, no matter your political position or social status. You must pass through this process unless you are not ready to be law abiding”.
On the performance of the FRSC in the last 25 years, Obasanjo commended the agency for impacting positively on Nigerian road users but urgedit to redouble ongoing efforts on road safety management. He further advised drivers to pass through the necessary certification process for acquiring the driver’s license in order to reduce the spate of road crashes in the country.
Reacting, the FRSC Corps Marshal and Chief Executive, OsitaChidoka described the visit of Obasanjo to process his driver’s licence as a strong indicator that Nigeria has what it takes to be a country governed by law.
Panic Grips PDP Over Governors Threat To Join APC
The Peoples Democratic Party has begun desperate moves to prevent governors elected on its platform as well as its members from carrying out their threat to defect to the newly formed All Progressives Congress.
This follows indications that no fewer than 12 PDP governors as well as many of the party’s members in the national and state assemblies and its 36 state chapters were being wooed by APC chieftains.
Some of the governors had told PDP leaders last week that they would leave the fold in protest at the disdain which President Goodluck Jonathan and the party leadership had shown for them.
Saturday PUNCH learnt that the PDP had moved to stop a mass defection by embarking on a sudden reconciliation drive, to stop estranged members from defecting to the APC.
The three major political parties that merged to form the APC are the Action Congress of Nigeria, All Nigeria Peoples Party and the Congress for Progressive Change.
Imo State Governor, Rochas Okorocha, of the All Progressives Grand Alliance, is also involved in APC.
The panic within the ruling party was responsible for the hurried formation of the PDP Governors Forum, which came few days after the opposition governors announced the formation of the Progressive Governors Forum.
Findings by our correspondent showed that the leadership of the party was not comfortable with the coming together of the opposition parties.
The National Chairman of the PDP, Dr. Bamanga Tukur, lent credence to this state of panic in a telephone interview with our correspondent on Thursday morning, when he said the opposition should not expect his party to sleep when it (opposition) was busy strategising.
“So, you expect our party to go to sleep when others are planning ahead? That is not possible,” he said.
It was on this basis that governors elected on the platform of the party met with leaders of the party from South-West PDP in Abuja on Thursday evening, asking them to sheath their swords and come together in the interest of the party.
Four of the governors spoke the minds of their colleagues at a meeting they had with the party leaders at the Katsina Governor’s Lodge in Asokoro, Abuja.
The governors are Ibrahim Shema (Katsina), Gabriel Suswan (Benue), Emmanuel Uduaghan (Delta) and Martin Elechi (Ebonyi).
These governors are members of the PDPGF Reconciliatory Committee put together to resolve the crises rocking the party in the South-West. The other member of the committee, Governor Murtala Nyako of Adamawa State, did not attend the meeting.
He was said to be in President’s Goodluck Jonathan’s entourage to Borno and Yobe states.
Shema, who is the chairman of the committee, said, “We are to reconcile all the factions. I want you to come to the table with open hands. God has blessed this party by putting it at the helm of affairs of the country since 1999.
“We need to work together and resolve the crises and that is why we are here.”
Elechi said, “We won’t impose our decision on you. We will allow you to take decisions in the interest of the party. Just let peace reign in the party in the zone.”
Also speaking, Suswam said, “We will listen to you state by state. Then take the zone together. We will want you to be sincere with us.”
Uduaghan said, “The party is not happy with the problems facing the party in the zone. That is why we are here. Please, allow peace to reign and open your heats to us so that we can solve the problems.”
A member of the party from Ekiti State, Ayo Arise, had told the committee that those in attendance were not quarrelling. He said those who were against the group from his state were not invited to the meeting.
But Shema said that would be taken care of later, adding that he was aware of the existence of factions in the party’s state chapters.
Among those at the meeting were a former governor of Ekiti State, Mr. Segun Oni; Chief Bode Mustapha, Chief Oyewole Fasawe, Chief Dipo Odujinrin, Dare Bejide, Akin Omole, Dele Adelakun and Dapo Anisulowo.
The Chairman of the PDP Board of Trustees, Chief Tony Anenih, is expected to lead a reconciliatory team to meet with former President Olusegun Obasanjo and a former Minister of Defence, Lt.Gen. Theophilus Danjuma (retd.).
Tukur, who confirmed the reconciliation efforts, said they were part of his strategies to keep the party together.
“Reconciliation was part of my agenda for the party when I was contesting for the chairmanship. It is time for me to show that I want our party members to unite,” he said.
This follows indications that no fewer than 12 PDP governors as well as many of the party’s members in the national and state assemblies and its 36 state chapters were being wooed by APC chieftains.
Some of the governors had told PDP leaders last week that they would leave the fold in protest at the disdain which President Goodluck Jonathan and the party leadership had shown for them.
Saturday PUNCH learnt that the PDP had moved to stop a mass defection by embarking on a sudden reconciliation drive, to stop estranged members from defecting to the APC.
The three major political parties that merged to form the APC are the Action Congress of Nigeria, All Nigeria Peoples Party and the Congress for Progressive Change.
Imo State Governor, Rochas Okorocha, of the All Progressives Grand Alliance, is also involved in APC.
The panic within the ruling party was responsible for the hurried formation of the PDP Governors Forum, which came few days after the opposition governors announced the formation of the Progressive Governors Forum.
Findings by our correspondent showed that the leadership of the party was not comfortable with the coming together of the opposition parties.
The National Chairman of the PDP, Dr. Bamanga Tukur, lent credence to this state of panic in a telephone interview with our correspondent on Thursday morning, when he said the opposition should not expect his party to sleep when it (opposition) was busy strategising.
“So, you expect our party to go to sleep when others are planning ahead? That is not possible,” he said.
It was on this basis that governors elected on the platform of the party met with leaders of the party from South-West PDP in Abuja on Thursday evening, asking them to sheath their swords and come together in the interest of the party.
Four of the governors spoke the minds of their colleagues at a meeting they had with the party leaders at the Katsina Governor’s Lodge in Asokoro, Abuja.
The governors are Ibrahim Shema (Katsina), Gabriel Suswan (Benue), Emmanuel Uduaghan (Delta) and Martin Elechi (Ebonyi).
These governors are members of the PDPGF Reconciliatory Committee put together to resolve the crises rocking the party in the South-West. The other member of the committee, Governor Murtala Nyako of Adamawa State, did not attend the meeting.
He was said to be in President’s Goodluck Jonathan’s entourage to Borno and Yobe states.
Shema, who is the chairman of the committee, said, “We are to reconcile all the factions. I want you to come to the table with open hands. God has blessed this party by putting it at the helm of affairs of the country since 1999.
“We need to work together and resolve the crises and that is why we are here.”
Elechi said, “We won’t impose our decision on you. We will allow you to take decisions in the interest of the party. Just let peace reign in the party in the zone.”
Also speaking, Suswam said, “We will listen to you state by state. Then take the zone together. We will want you to be sincere with us.”
Uduaghan said, “The party is not happy with the problems facing the party in the zone. That is why we are here. Please, allow peace to reign and open your heats to us so that we can solve the problems.”
A member of the party from Ekiti State, Ayo Arise, had told the committee that those in attendance were not quarrelling. He said those who were against the group from his state were not invited to the meeting.
But Shema said that would be taken care of later, adding that he was aware of the existence of factions in the party’s state chapters.
Among those at the meeting were a former governor of Ekiti State, Mr. Segun Oni; Chief Bode Mustapha, Chief Oyewole Fasawe, Chief Dipo Odujinrin, Dare Bejide, Akin Omole, Dele Adelakun and Dapo Anisulowo.
The Chairman of the PDP Board of Trustees, Chief Tony Anenih, is expected to lead a reconciliatory team to meet with former President Olusegun Obasanjo and a former Minister of Defence, Lt.Gen. Theophilus Danjuma (retd.).
Tukur, who confirmed the reconciliation efforts, said they were part of his strategies to keep the party together.
“Reconciliation was part of my agenda for the party when I was contesting for the chairmanship. It is time for me to show that I want our party members to unite,” he said.
We Must Make Nigeria Stronger And United – Former President, Shagari
In a move to ensure unity and progress of the country, former President Shehu Shagari has called on Nigerians to work towards moving Nigeria forward.
The nation’s statesmen spoke in Shagari town on Friday when Minister of Health, Prof. Onyebuchi Chukwu paid him a courtesy visit.
President Shagari observed that Nigeria, which is a great nation that provides leadership to other sister African countries, must be made stronger and its people united.
“We must all work towards making the nation a strong and united country irrespective of our diverse religious, ethnic and cultural differences,” he said.
Shagari commended Governor Aliyu Wamakko for transforming the state in all sectors. “We are happy and we must show appreciation for upgrading the Shagari Primary Healthcare to the status of a general hospital.”
On his part, the Minister said that Shagari, “apart from being a father and a revered leader in Nigeria, is also humble, incorruptible and disciplined. These are some of the lessons we must all learn from leaders like him for Nigeria to develop further,” he added.
Earlier, Governor Wamakko told the former President that the Minister’s visit was aimed at “showing respect to him as a leader who was still contributing meaningfully to national development.”
President Shagari observed that Nigeria, which is a great nation that provides leadership to other sister African countries, must be made stronger and its people united.
“We must all work towards making the nation a strong and united country irrespective of our diverse religious, ethnic and cultural differences,” he said.
Shagari commended Governor Aliyu Wamakko for transforming the state in all sectors. “We are happy and we must show appreciation for upgrading the Shagari Primary Healthcare to the status of a general hospital.”
On his part, the Minister said that Shagari, “apart from being a father and a revered leader in Nigeria, is also humble, incorruptible and disciplined. These are some of the lessons we must all learn from leaders like him for Nigeria to develop further,” he added.
Earlier, Governor Wamakko told the former President that the Minister’s visit was aimed at “showing respect to him as a leader who was still contributing meaningfully to national development.”
My Highest Paying Customer Is A Nigerian – Queen Elizabeth’s Tailor
Shirt maker and owner of Grosvenor Shirts Limited, Karl Dunkley, was recently awarded the Royal Warrant by Her Majesty, Queen Elizabeth II. This makes him the Queen’s official tailor.
What’s the process of shirt making at Grosvenor?
We start with a range of classic shirts but increasingly we become more uptown, more interesting and more unique. We first of all start about a year ahead with designing of the clothes. Then we make a whole range of a collection – very limited edition. So there would only be 10 to 12 shirts designed for only one store and potentially they could be the only 12 in the world because they could just be uniquely made for that store.
How long have you been in this business?
I have always been in the clothing industry; I started working at Harrods when I was 16 and I worked my way through different things before ending up in the clothing business.
How did you break into the Nigerian fashion industry?
Nigeria came about because of my factory in the UK. We have our own boutique in Mayfair, just off New Bond Street. Before then, we were in Selfridges, we always had a lot of Nigerian customers. I think the shirts are more appreciated by Nigerians than other nationals.
You have been granted Royal Warrant by the Queen of England…
We have been granted a Royal Warrant by the queen as outfitters; basically, there are only three royal warrants that are issued. One is from Her Majesty the Queen; the other, from His Royal Highness, Prince Phillip; and the third, from His Royal Highness, the Prince of Wales. These are the only three people who can grant royal warrants. To be granted a royal warrant, you must have been a regular supplier to the individual or household for a minimum of five years.
How did you get that link to the British royal family?
I have always had contacts. I have been doing it for many years in previous companies. I looked after royal warrants in those companies.
Clothing the Queen, what’s the experience like?
We don’t deal with individuals, we deal with staff within the household.
You don’t take measurements?
It has not been necessary so far. I am not saying it won’t be, but not at this stage.
How then do you determine the size of the individual you are sewing for?
In previous companies, I have met with different members of the royal family.
It must be a huge responsibility.
Clothing the royal family is not like clothing the ordinary man on the street.
But we have a lot of very influential people that we are dressing. We also do made-to-measure for a lot of people as well and we have a lot of very high level customers from Nigeria and Ghana.
Do you only cater for the deep pocket, the very rich and influential clients?
Our shirts retail from about £95 to £140 (about N23,000 to N33,500 per shirt) , so they tend to be at a high level.
Why are they so expensive?
It is because they are made out of beautiful fabrics. There is an enormous amount of detail that goes into making a shirt.
There is a lot of adding, cutting and attaching. A lot of fabrics are used, a lot of material is wasted. It is not like the normal shirt where there is a pattern and it can be cut and just sewn together. These are extremely difficult.
Which members of the royal family do you sew for? All of them?
All I can say is that we have won the royal warrant to be outfitters for Her Majesty, the Queen.
That should fetch you a lot of money.
No. The issue is not the money. I think it is just very nice to be granted the warrant. It shows that we are a good quality company.
What do you think this can do for your brand?
I think it is nice and I am extremely honoured to have been granted the warrant. We will be able to put the insignia on our packaging, boxes and business cards. Also, it is very important for us to continue creating the right shirts and investing in training for the staff.
You mean people are going to be looking at the brand from up there?
We hope so.
In line with that, what are you doing to up your standard?
We are looking at new products, improving techniques in the factory and in marketing as well as new retail locations.
Do you have female customers?
Yes. We have shirts for ladies.
Is your Nigerian clients different from others, especially the Europeans?
I think the shirt is more important, not just in Nigeria but probably in Africa. We have a store opening in Ghana in March as well. I think maybe African women like to wear shirts more than English women. A lot of English women like to wear knits because it is colder in Europe. Also, African men care about their shirts more than English men. English men know they will just throw a jacket on it and wear it all day but here, quite often, people move around without their jackets on.
So you get a lot of requests here?
Yes.
Is that why you are introducing so many colours because you know Nigerians like colours?
No. To be honest, this is what we wear in London as well. This is not a unique collection for this place, we have this in London. It is basically to get a bit of variety. We do have a few more classics but it is one collection for all our outlets. However, when we do shirts with liberty, we try to combine them so that each store has something that is a completely limited edition.
Do you encounter challenges as you move around the African market?
I don’t think so. We share information between the stores here. We have a good relationship. If I’m here, I may invite customers to come and see the stores. One of my highest spending customers is coming this evening; I called him when I got here and he informed me that he was in my store in Mayfair.
Your highest spending customer is a Nigerian!
Yes.
More than all your customers in the whole of Europe?
Yes, as an individual, he spends more than any single other customer.
Who is he?
No. I won’t tell you who he is.
We start with a range of classic shirts but increasingly we become more uptown, more interesting and more unique. We first of all start about a year ahead with designing of the clothes. Then we make a whole range of a collection – very limited edition. So there would only be 10 to 12 shirts designed for only one store and potentially they could be the only 12 in the world because they could just be uniquely made for that store.
How long have you been in this business?
I have always been in the clothing industry; I started working at Harrods when I was 16 and I worked my way through different things before ending up in the clothing business.
How did you break into the Nigerian fashion industry?
Nigeria came about because of my factory in the UK. We have our own boutique in Mayfair, just off New Bond Street. Before then, we were in Selfridges, we always had a lot of Nigerian customers. I think the shirts are more appreciated by Nigerians than other nationals.
You have been granted Royal Warrant by the Queen of England…
We have been granted a Royal Warrant by the queen as outfitters; basically, there are only three royal warrants that are issued. One is from Her Majesty the Queen; the other, from His Royal Highness, Prince Phillip; and the third, from His Royal Highness, the Prince of Wales. These are the only three people who can grant royal warrants. To be granted a royal warrant, you must have been a regular supplier to the individual or household for a minimum of five years.
How did you get that link to the British royal family?
I have always had contacts. I have been doing it for many years in previous companies. I looked after royal warrants in those companies.
Clothing the Queen, what’s the experience like?
We don’t deal with individuals, we deal with staff within the household.
You don’t take measurements?
It has not been necessary so far. I am not saying it won’t be, but not at this stage.
How then do you determine the size of the individual you are sewing for?
In previous companies, I have met with different members of the royal family.
It must be a huge responsibility.
Clothing the royal family is not like clothing the ordinary man on the street.
But we have a lot of very influential people that we are dressing. We also do made-to-measure for a lot of people as well and we have a lot of very high level customers from Nigeria and Ghana.
Do you only cater for the deep pocket, the very rich and influential clients?
Our shirts retail from about £95 to £140 (about N23,000 to N33,500 per shirt) , so they tend to be at a high level.
Why are they so expensive?
It is because they are made out of beautiful fabrics. There is an enormous amount of detail that goes into making a shirt.
There is a lot of adding, cutting and attaching. A lot of fabrics are used, a lot of material is wasted. It is not like the normal shirt where there is a pattern and it can be cut and just sewn together. These are extremely difficult.
Which members of the royal family do you sew for? All of them?
All I can say is that we have won the royal warrant to be outfitters for Her Majesty, the Queen.
That should fetch you a lot of money.
No. The issue is not the money. I think it is just very nice to be granted the warrant. It shows that we are a good quality company.
What do you think this can do for your brand?
I think it is nice and I am extremely honoured to have been granted the warrant. We will be able to put the insignia on our packaging, boxes and business cards. Also, it is very important for us to continue creating the right shirts and investing in training for the staff.
You mean people are going to be looking at the brand from up there?
We hope so.
In line with that, what are you doing to up your standard?
We are looking at new products, improving techniques in the factory and in marketing as well as new retail locations.
Do you have female customers?
Yes. We have shirts for ladies.
Is your Nigerian clients different from others, especially the Europeans?
I think the shirt is more important, not just in Nigeria but probably in Africa. We have a store opening in Ghana in March as well. I think maybe African women like to wear shirts more than English women. A lot of English women like to wear knits because it is colder in Europe. Also, African men care about their shirts more than English men. English men know they will just throw a jacket on it and wear it all day but here, quite often, people move around without their jackets on.
So you get a lot of requests here?
Yes.
Is that why you are introducing so many colours because you know Nigerians like colours?
No. To be honest, this is what we wear in London as well. This is not a unique collection for this place, we have this in London. It is basically to get a bit of variety. We do have a few more classics but it is one collection for all our outlets. However, when we do shirts with liberty, we try to combine them so that each store has something that is a completely limited edition.
Do you encounter challenges as you move around the African market?
I don’t think so. We share information between the stores here. We have a good relationship. If I’m here, I may invite customers to come and see the stores. One of my highest spending customers is coming this evening; I called him when I got here and he informed me that he was in my store in Mayfair.
Your highest spending customer is a Nigerian!
Yes.
More than all your customers in the whole of Europe?
Yes, as an individual, he spends more than any single other customer.
Who is he?
No. I won’t tell you who he is.
LUTH Nurses Ignored My Pregnant Wife As She Lay Dying – Bereaved Husband
Heavens smiled on Mr. David Akingbehin, when his 45-year-old wife, Margaret, told him she was pregnant.
After their last one was born 12 years ago, the couple had tried to have another for more than a decade without success.
“When we learnt she was pregnant, we were overjoyed,” David told our correspondent.
He said they agreed that the gift from heaven must be well taken care of. So, Margaret registered for ante-natal at the Lagos University Teaching Hospital, Idi-Araba, Lagos.
“She never missed her ante-natal appointments. In fact, medical officials at LUTH commended her for her regular attendance. She went there every Thursday. We knew she was due between February and March,” David told Saturday PUNCH at their home in Kofoworola Street, Jakande Estate, Isolo Lagos on Sunday.
On February 28, 2013, Margaret started feeling some pains in her tummy.
Our correspondent learnt that she quickly picked her purse, took her hospital card, drove her Sport Utility Vehicle to LUTH since it was her appointment day.
On the way, she called her husband, who was not around at the time, to inform him that she was on her way to the hospital.
David narrated how expectant his family was about the child Margaret was carrying.
He said, “We repainted the house, did some more decorations and made a lot of adjustments to the home, just to ensure that our child comes into a lovely house. We spent at least N2m, to show you how serious we were about that child.
“The child was supposed to be the joy of our family. We wanted to give everything we had to ensure the child was well taken care of.
“We actually decided she should register for ante-natal at LUTH because friends had told us that since it is a federal hospital, they would have capable hands who would ensure she had a safe delivery.”
But Margaret, who drove to the hospital in high spirits, never came back home.
Even though David is mourning, the circumstances surrounding his wife’s death have caused him to cry out for justice and demand answers to what happened.
“The hospital staff killed my wife,” he simply told our correspondent.
When our correspondent visited David, sympathisers and family members surrounded him, consoling him and expressing their anger at the staff of LUTH who allegedly left Margaret uncared for before she died.
Dabbing his eyes occasionally with a handkerchief, David narrated what happened.
“A doctor who attended to Margaret two weeks ago during her ante-natal appointment had told her that she was going to be delivered of the baby through CS because of her age. We had already agreed that it was fine by us.
“On that Thursday, my wife called me from the hospital and said one Dr. Makwe had said she would be admitted and scheduled her for a Caesarean Section. She even suggested to the doctors that she would come back on Monday but I insisted that she should just stay there. I told her there was nothing for her to do at home that I could not handle.
“The following morning, she had already paid all the necessary bills. They had also secured a bed space for her. Around 6am that morning (Friday), she called and said she was being moved to the labour ward,” he said.
According to David, by 7 am, he arrived the hospital with the things his wife needed.
Margaret told him that a doctor who attended to her had quarrelled with another doctor on duty for keeping her waiting.
David said, “My wife told me the doctor said it was an emergency case, that they should have scheduled her for a CS right away. She said a device was used to examine the breathing of the child and it was learnt that the baby was in distress.
“But can you believe that since about 7am that the doctor instructed that she should be scheduled for a CS, they did not make any attempt to take her to the theatre until 2pm?
“She was delayed for those hours before she was moved to the theatre. At this time, she was already having contractions. They took her to the theatre and brought her back to the ward. They took her back on two occasions. She had started experiencing serious pain at that point.”
David said as he agonised over the state of his wife, he learnt that someone else had been rushed to the theatre, which was why his wife had to be taken back to the ward.
He told Saturday PUNCH he overheard some of the nurses say in Yoruba, ‘We need to attend to staff first.”
He explained that the way they said it made it unclear whether the patient who had displaced his wife was a wife of a staff member or an employee.
It was learnt that when David started complaining about his wife’s situation and how the medical personnel had neglected her, they asked him to go out. At this point, Margaret was kept waiting at the pre-surgical room of the theatre
David said, “They did not even care about her as she writhed in pain. When they asked me to go out, I could even hear the nurses chatting. They did not care about the pain she was feeling.
“While I was waiting outside, I think a nurse must have noticed she was groaning. I heard someone say, ‘the baby’s head is showing, don’t push’. But the baby later came out and it was found dead in the room. Some moment later, my wife died in the same room and I did not know. They told me nothing until about 4 pm.
“One of the nurses called me to go see Dr. Olorunfemi, who was on duty. He could not even look at me in the face and tell me what happened. I asked him what happened to my wife and he just held his head and said ‘sorry sir.’ I told him immediately, ‘You people have killed my wife.”
The Akingbehin family has decided to petition the Medical Council of Nigeria and the Chief Medical Director of LUTH. They insisted either the hospital staff’s negligence or preferential treatment given to a patient who displaced Margaret in the theatre killed her.
They said they needed the hospital to take responsibility for her death and apologise, nothing more.
David is left to care for his two children at the moment. One thing he said he would regret for the rest of his life was choosing LUTH as the hospital where his wife would give birth.
But the hospital has denied abandoning Margaret at the time she was supposed to undergo the CS.
Spokesperson for the hospital, Mrs. Hope Nwakolo, told our correspondent on Wednesday, “It is true she was scheduled for an emergency CS but when the deceased was taken to the theatre, two emergency surgeries were being done there. So, the doctors had to wait until the ongoing surgeries were completed.
“By the time it was her turn, she had developed complications and it is truly unfortunate that her case turned out the way it did. Efforts were made to rescusitate her without success.”
“When we learnt she was pregnant, we were overjoyed,” David told our correspondent.
He said they agreed that the gift from heaven must be well taken care of. So, Margaret registered for ante-natal at the Lagos University Teaching Hospital, Idi-Araba, Lagos.
“She never missed her ante-natal appointments. In fact, medical officials at LUTH commended her for her regular attendance. She went there every Thursday. We knew she was due between February and March,” David told Saturday PUNCH at their home in Kofoworola Street, Jakande Estate, Isolo Lagos on Sunday.
On February 28, 2013, Margaret started feeling some pains in her tummy.
Our correspondent learnt that she quickly picked her purse, took her hospital card, drove her Sport Utility Vehicle to LUTH since it was her appointment day.
On the way, she called her husband, who was not around at the time, to inform him that she was on her way to the hospital.
David narrated how expectant his family was about the child Margaret was carrying.
He said, “We repainted the house, did some more decorations and made a lot of adjustments to the home, just to ensure that our child comes into a lovely house. We spent at least N2m, to show you how serious we were about that child.
“The child was supposed to be the joy of our family. We wanted to give everything we had to ensure the child was well taken care of.
“We actually decided she should register for ante-natal at LUTH because friends had told us that since it is a federal hospital, they would have capable hands who would ensure she had a safe delivery.”
But Margaret, who drove to the hospital in high spirits, never came back home.
Even though David is mourning, the circumstances surrounding his wife’s death have caused him to cry out for justice and demand answers to what happened.
“The hospital staff killed my wife,” he simply told our correspondent.
When our correspondent visited David, sympathisers and family members surrounded him, consoling him and expressing their anger at the staff of LUTH who allegedly left Margaret uncared for before she died.
Dabbing his eyes occasionally with a handkerchief, David narrated what happened.
“A doctor who attended to Margaret two weeks ago during her ante-natal appointment had told her that she was going to be delivered of the baby through CS because of her age. We had already agreed that it was fine by us.
“On that Thursday, my wife called me from the hospital and said one Dr. Makwe had said she would be admitted and scheduled her for a Caesarean Section. She even suggested to the doctors that she would come back on Monday but I insisted that she should just stay there. I told her there was nothing for her to do at home that I could not handle.
“The following morning, she had already paid all the necessary bills. They had also secured a bed space for her. Around 6am that morning (Friday), she called and said she was being moved to the labour ward,” he said.
According to David, by 7 am, he arrived the hospital with the things his wife needed.
Margaret told him that a doctor who attended to her had quarrelled with another doctor on duty for keeping her waiting.
David said, “My wife told me the doctor said it was an emergency case, that they should have scheduled her for a CS right away. She said a device was used to examine the breathing of the child and it was learnt that the baby was in distress.
“But can you believe that since about 7am that the doctor instructed that she should be scheduled for a CS, they did not make any attempt to take her to the theatre until 2pm?
“She was delayed for those hours before she was moved to the theatre. At this time, she was already having contractions. They took her to the theatre and brought her back to the ward. They took her back on two occasions. She had started experiencing serious pain at that point.”
David said as he agonised over the state of his wife, he learnt that someone else had been rushed to the theatre, which was why his wife had to be taken back to the ward.
He told Saturday PUNCH he overheard some of the nurses say in Yoruba, ‘We need to attend to staff first.”
He explained that the way they said it made it unclear whether the patient who had displaced his wife was a wife of a staff member or an employee.
It was learnt that when David started complaining about his wife’s situation and how the medical personnel had neglected her, they asked him to go out. At this point, Margaret was kept waiting at the pre-surgical room of the theatre
David said, “They did not even care about her as she writhed in pain. When they asked me to go out, I could even hear the nurses chatting. They did not care about the pain she was feeling.
“While I was waiting outside, I think a nurse must have noticed she was groaning. I heard someone say, ‘the baby’s head is showing, don’t push’. But the baby later came out and it was found dead in the room. Some moment later, my wife died in the same room and I did not know. They told me nothing until about 4 pm.
“One of the nurses called me to go see Dr. Olorunfemi, who was on duty. He could not even look at me in the face and tell me what happened. I asked him what happened to my wife and he just held his head and said ‘sorry sir.’ I told him immediately, ‘You people have killed my wife.”
The Akingbehin family has decided to petition the Medical Council of Nigeria and the Chief Medical Director of LUTH. They insisted either the hospital staff’s negligence or preferential treatment given to a patient who displaced Margaret in the theatre killed her.
They said they needed the hospital to take responsibility for her death and apologise, nothing more.
David is left to care for his two children at the moment. One thing he said he would regret for the rest of his life was choosing LUTH as the hospital where his wife would give birth.
But the hospital has denied abandoning Margaret at the time she was supposed to undergo the CS.
Spokesperson for the hospital, Mrs. Hope Nwakolo, told our correspondent on Wednesday, “It is true she was scheduled for an emergency CS but when the deceased was taken to the theatre, two emergency surgeries were being done there. So, the doctors had to wait until the ongoing surgeries were completed.
“By the time it was her turn, she had developed complications and it is truly unfortunate that her case turned out the way it did. Efforts were made to rescusitate her without success.”
PHOTOS: Osuofia And Funke Akindele Sharing A Kiss
Nollywood actor and actress, Nkem Owoh and Funke Akindele were caught sharing a kiss with one another.
The picture was taken from a movie set, and they both seem to be having fun...What do you think?
View pictures below...
The picture was taken from a movie set, and they both seem to be having fun...What do you think?
View pictures below...
PHOTOS: Pictures Of Fast Rising Singer Ruthless Diva's In Hot Bikini
24-year-old fast rising singer, Chinenye Ruth Okorie, popularly known as Ruthless Diva just released these hot bikini photos from her recent photo shoot.
Ruth is a graduate of International Relations from NOUN and just recently dropped her new video.
Ruth is a graduate of International Relations from NOUN and just recently dropped her new video.
My Skin Crawls When My Husband Touches Me
I have been married for a little over a year now. In the earlier years of our relationship, it seemed as though we shared similar values (still does sometimes) but must importantly, even though I loved him desperately, I knew he loved me even more.
Barely a couple of months into our marriage, I fell pregnant. Though it was a fairly easy pregnancy compared to most other horrible experiences I've come across, I was left with zero sex drive. I'd always be quite fit and beautiful but the pregnancy made me feel permanently ill and unattractive and this affected my desire for sex. Despite this, I kept at it knowing fully well that there was another person with needs and desires to be met. Sex stopped being as frequent as before - but it was there.
Between then and now, my husband has become a serial cheat. Keeping late nights everyday with all sorts of women calling even when he finally gets home by 2am.
He is being mentally and emotionally abusive (never physically because he is too manipulative for that) . The worst part of it is that as a woman you know when your husband is cheating. I see the proofs - phone conversations, captured nude screen shots of other women etc... And he keeps trying to make me feel like I'm crazy and paranoid. It has gotten to the stage where I feel so rubbed and cheated. I cringe when he touches me now and try to force a reaction when we are having sex. I simply can't shake the feeling of hurt and betrayal. And I now feel as though I'm being held prisoner because in my heart I know I deserve better.
I've got 2 degrees from some of the best universities in the world. I have a job that most people could only dream of. I earn at least 3 times more than what he earns. And in the few months after the birth of my baby, I have returned to a size 6. Yet I still try to be the wife our mothers teach us to be. I know better hence I feel deeply cheated. Try as I may, this feeling has taken over my mind to the point where even the thought of being intimate with him feels like a betrayal to myself and fills me with disgust! At this point, I'm at the end of my ropes and I don't know what to do... Kindly advice... Thank you.
Barely a couple of months into our marriage, I fell pregnant. Though it was a fairly easy pregnancy compared to most other horrible experiences I've come across, I was left with zero sex drive. I'd always be quite fit and beautiful but the pregnancy made me feel permanently ill and unattractive and this affected my desire for sex. Despite this, I kept at it knowing fully well that there was another person with needs and desires to be met. Sex stopped being as frequent as before - but it was there.
Between then and now, my husband has become a serial cheat. Keeping late nights everyday with all sorts of women calling even when he finally gets home by 2am.
He is being mentally and emotionally abusive (never physically because he is too manipulative for that) . The worst part of it is that as a woman you know when your husband is cheating. I see the proofs - phone conversations, captured nude screen shots of other women etc... And he keeps trying to make me feel like I'm crazy and paranoid. It has gotten to the stage where I feel so rubbed and cheated. I cringe when he touches me now and try to force a reaction when we are having sex. I simply can't shake the feeling of hurt and betrayal. And I now feel as though I'm being held prisoner because in my heart I know I deserve better.
I've got 2 degrees from some of the best universities in the world. I have a job that most people could only dream of. I earn at least 3 times more than what he earns. And in the few months after the birth of my baby, I have returned to a size 6. Yet I still try to be the wife our mothers teach us to be. I know better hence I feel deeply cheated. Try as I may, this feeling has taken over my mind to the point where even the thought of being intimate with him feels like a betrayal to myself and fills me with disgust! At this point, I'm at the end of my ropes and I don't know what to do... Kindly advice... Thank you.
Boko Haram Funded By Latin America Drug Gang – Report
There are indications that terrorist groups, Boko Haram and Ansaru, are being funded by drug cartels in Latin America, a report has revealed.
The report entitled, “Terrorism in Northern Africa and the Sahel in 2012: Global Reach and Implications,” is an update on five earlier studies.
Published by the Director, Inter-University Centre for Terrorism Studies, USA, Yonah Alexander, in February 2013, the report suggested that Al-Qaida in Islamic Maghreb, had aligned with many other groups in order to expand its sources of funding.
Intelligence reports have in the past identified a strong link between AQIM and Boko Haram with the newly emerging Ansaru.
In December 2012, the Commander of the United States African Command, Gen. Carter Ham, stated that there was an increasing collaboration between AQIM and other terrorist groups in Africa, including Boko Haram.
The 33-page report states in part, “The threats of Al-Qaida’s new regional hub in northern Mali and from its associates constitute both tactical and strategic challenges.
“Primary sources of financing of their activities include kidnapping (in some cases, kidnapping is outsourced to criminals), piracy and illicit trafficking of drugs, human, vehicles and other contraband goods.
“Intelligence reports and arrests have confirmed that AQIM has established links with Latin cartels for ‘drugs-for-arms’ smuggling into Europe through terrorist-trafficking networks in the Sahel.”
The report indicates that the drug and arms trafficking undertaken by the terrorists groups is further aided by porous borders of countries in the region.
It is stated in the report that the status of AQIM in the Sahel has opened a new path for the terrorist group to shift its centre of gravity from Afghanistan and Pakistan to a new abode.
With regional assessments on nine different African nations, the report states in the section on Nigeria, that Boko Haram and Ansaru’s involvement with AQIM fits the “model of internationalisation of terrorist movements” in other parts of the world.
Boko Haram operatives have been reported in the past to have attacked banks in order to raise funds for their operations.
However, our correspondent contacted the spokesperson for the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency, Mitchell Ofoyeju, to find out if the agency was aware of the drug-for-arms modus operandi of Boko Haram and Ansaru.
“We are aware of the report. The agency is conducting a critical investigation on that angle. The outcome of the investigation would determine what step to take next. But as far as NDLEA is concerned, we are not overlooking anything,” Ofoyeju said.
The report entitled, “Terrorism in Northern Africa and the Sahel in 2012: Global Reach and Implications,” is an update on five earlier studies.
Published by the Director, Inter-University Centre for Terrorism Studies, USA, Yonah Alexander, in February 2013, the report suggested that Al-Qaida in Islamic Maghreb, had aligned with many other groups in order to expand its sources of funding.
Intelligence reports have in the past identified a strong link between AQIM and Boko Haram with the newly emerging Ansaru.
In December 2012, the Commander of the United States African Command, Gen. Carter Ham, stated that there was an increasing collaboration between AQIM and other terrorist groups in Africa, including Boko Haram.
The 33-page report states in part, “The threats of Al-Qaida’s new regional hub in northern Mali and from its associates constitute both tactical and strategic challenges.
“Primary sources of financing of their activities include kidnapping (in some cases, kidnapping is outsourced to criminals), piracy and illicit trafficking of drugs, human, vehicles and other contraband goods.
“Intelligence reports and arrests have confirmed that AQIM has established links with Latin cartels for ‘drugs-for-arms’ smuggling into Europe through terrorist-trafficking networks in the Sahel.”
The report indicates that the drug and arms trafficking undertaken by the terrorists groups is further aided by porous borders of countries in the region.
It is stated in the report that the status of AQIM in the Sahel has opened a new path for the terrorist group to shift its centre of gravity from Afghanistan and Pakistan to a new abode.
With regional assessments on nine different African nations, the report states in the section on Nigeria, that Boko Haram and Ansaru’s involvement with AQIM fits the “model of internationalisation of terrorist movements” in other parts of the world.
Boko Haram operatives have been reported in the past to have attacked banks in order to raise funds for their operations.
However, our correspondent contacted the spokesperson for the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency, Mitchell Ofoyeju, to find out if the agency was aware of the drug-for-arms modus operandi of Boko Haram and Ansaru.
“We are aware of the report. The agency is conducting a critical investigation on that angle. The outcome of the investigation would determine what step to take next. But as far as NDLEA is concerned, we are not overlooking anything,” Ofoyeju said.
Wednesday, 6 March 2013
Okikijesu Olawuyi: The Baby Born Without A Skull (Photo)
The incredible people at Global Initiative for Peace Love and Care (GIPLC) an NGO based in Abuja with a strong bias for orphans and vulnerable children are doing a great job and here is something phenomenal they did recently - the case of Okikijesu Olawuyi.
Okiki was born in May 11 2010 without more than half of her skull. A rare medical condition called Congenital Cranial Deficiency.
All of the hospitals visited by their organisation home and abroad could not offer a cure or lacked the facilities and man power except for the John Hopkins hospital in Maryland, Baltimore USA where the director of Paediatrics Dr Ben Carson is the first doctor to handle an issue like this ever, only then it was on a conjoined twins joined at their heads (the Binder twins). Please continue...
When GIPLC became involved in Okiki's case and after due consultations, inquiries and findings as to how much it will cost to have Okiki treated, they were able to raise within the space of 72 hours the sum of $234,000 (two hundred and thirty four thousand USD) or N37,000,000 (thirty seven million naira)and deposited the complete sum to the John Hopkins Medical which was their required deposit to commence the series of surgery on Okiki. She will now leave Nigeria in the company of her parents for the USA by April 2013.
Okiki is not the first child GIPLC has sponsored overseas for Medical attention. They have for a period of six years raised over N120,000,000 (one hundred and twenty million naira) for children with debilitating medical condition. (See it here - www.giplc.org)
Okiki's is special because no NGO in the history of Nigeria has accomplished this feat, to raise the sum of N37,000,000 for a single individual!
GIPLC World Press Conference comes up at Transcorp Hilton in Abuja on the 26th of March 2013.
Okiki was born in May 11 2010 without more than half of her skull. A rare medical condition called Congenital Cranial Deficiency.
All of the hospitals visited by their organisation home and abroad could not offer a cure or lacked the facilities and man power except for the John Hopkins hospital in Maryland, Baltimore USA where the director of Paediatrics Dr Ben Carson is the first doctor to handle an issue like this ever, only then it was on a conjoined twins joined at their heads (the Binder twins). Please continue...
When GIPLC became involved in Okiki's case and after due consultations, inquiries and findings as to how much it will cost to have Okiki treated, they were able to raise within the space of 72 hours the sum of $234,000 (two hundred and thirty four thousand USD) or N37,000,000 (thirty seven million naira)and deposited the complete sum to the John Hopkins Medical which was their required deposit to commence the series of surgery on Okiki. She will now leave Nigeria in the company of her parents for the USA by April 2013.
Okiki is not the first child GIPLC has sponsored overseas for Medical attention. They have for a period of six years raised over N120,000,000 (one hundred and twenty million naira) for children with debilitating medical condition. (See it here - www.giplc.org)
Okiki's is special because no NGO in the history of Nigeria has accomplished this feat, to raise the sum of N37,000,000 for a single individual!
GIPLC World Press Conference comes up at Transcorp Hilton in Abuja on the 26th of March 2013.
Reps Approve Life Jail for Rapists
The Nigerian lawmakers approved the bill on Tuesday. The House of Representatives in Abuja on Tuesday approved life imprisonment for any person convicted of rape. In addition, persons convicted of gang raping a victim shall be liable jointly and severally to a minimum of 20 years imprisonment without the option of fine.
The decisions followed the adoption of a report on a Bill for an Act to Eliminate Violence in Private and Public Life; Prohibit all Forms of Violence, Harmful Traditional Practices against Persons. The bill seeks to safeguard the rights of vulnerable persons, particularly the girl- child, women and girls, against private and domestic violence. The bill was sponsored by Abike Dabiri-Erewa (ACN-Lagos), the Chairman of the House Committee on Diaspora.
Mrs. Dabiri-Erewa said it had become expedient for the bill to become law going by the rising cases of violence against persons in Nigeria. The bill also approved 25 years imprisonment for any person who attempted to use chemical, biological or any harmful liquid on another person.
It also provides that any person who incites, aids, abets, or counsels another person to commit violence is guilty of the offence and liable on conviction to three years imprisonment or N200, 000 fine or both Accordingly, any person convicted of performing female circumcision and general mutilation or engaging someone to carry it out risks four years in jail or a fine not more than N200,000 or both.
Aiding female circumcision attracts N100, 000 or two years in jail or both. Any person convicted of frustrating investigation and prosecution of offenders is guilty of felony and liable on conviction to imprisonment of not more than three years or a fine not exceeding N500, 000.
The bill will only become law after the Senate concurs to it and the President signs it.
Mrs. Dabiri-Erewa said it had become expedient for the bill to become law going by the rising cases of violence against persons in Nigeria. The bill also approved 25 years imprisonment for any person who attempted to use chemical, biological or any harmful liquid on another person.
It also provides that any person who incites, aids, abets, or counsels another person to commit violence is guilty of the offence and liable on conviction to three years imprisonment or N200, 000 fine or both Accordingly, any person convicted of performing female circumcision and general mutilation or engaging someone to carry it out risks four years in jail or a fine not more than N200,000 or both.
Aiding female circumcision attracts N100, 000 or two years in jail or both. Any person convicted of frustrating investigation and prosecution of offenders is guilty of felony and liable on conviction to imprisonment of not more than three years or a fine not exceeding N500, 000.
The bill will only become law after the Senate concurs to it and the President signs it.
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