Sunday, 4 November 2012

We have no hands in the killing of Maj-Gen. Mamman Shuwa – Boko Haram

The dreaded sect has denied the killing of Maj-Gen. Mamman and other politicians and elders in Borno state, stating that they have no hands in the alleged assassinations in Maiduguri, the Borno state capital.
This was reportedly made known by the sect’s spokesman, Abu Mohammed Abdulaziz, on Sunday, in a tele-conference with newsmen in Maiduguri. He said, had no hand in the killing of Gen. and his guest.
His words: “people are saying that we have hands in the killing of Major General . We don’t have any problem with this elder statesman. He is a responsible person and he has not said anything wrong against sect. This is why I am stating clearly that we have no hands in the killing of this man. The same also applies to the killings of Mustapha Flawama, an associate of Sen. Modu Ali Sheriff; and other politicians and elders recently in the state.”
The Boko Haram spokesperson however reiterated that the six personalities appointed by the Boko Haram to mediate with the Federal Government still stand, insisting that: “these are the elder statesmen and personalities that we trust and will become witnesses, in case of any betrayals on the part of government at the state and federal levels.”
InformationNigeria.org

“Nollywood isn’t challenging enough”: Ego Boyo talks about going back to acting

by Rachel Ogbu

Ego Boyo, famous for her role in the 90s soap opera, Checkmate popular is still in no hurry to return to acting anytime soon.
In a recent interview, the actress said she was more into corporate business these days but has occasionally acted in a few short films for clients, documentaries and adverts.
“Motherhood is the fulfillment of my dream. I have three wonderful children and I love them dearly. I think in our industry, it is actually something that is a bit easier to manage because we do not really work round the clock. I try to keep my ear to the ground to see what is going on because I have not left the industry,” she said.
Boyo confirms that she still plans to do films but for now she concentrates majorly on her company, Temple Productions. “We were renting out equipment and working on post-production for a number of films; we have always been in the industry. The only difference is that I have taken more of a quieter role,” she said.
About the standards of the Nigerian film industry, Boyo said in the last five years there has been a lot of progress in that direction but it is not perfect yet. “That gives me hope that maybe this is the time to do another film. That I have the cinemas now, I can go to, release my films and people would see it. At the same time, we are working on a distribution network for DVDs that does not involve piracy,” Boyo said.
She also spoke about doing something different when she returns full time to acting again. “I found out that most of the roles I was being offered was nothing challenging. It was not much different from Ann Hastrup in Checkmate or the role I played in Violated. What is the fun in that? It was never challenging enough to make me want to go back,” she said.
She added:
“Acting is something I still think about. If somebody offers me a fantastic role, I might do it but as I said till date, nobody has. I played Ann Hastrup for four years, so why would I want to keep playing the same role in a different name? Therefore, if I ever find that one challenging role, I could be tempted. Until then, I am sticking to my producing.”
 YNaija.com

When Should Formal Education Stop? First Degree, Masters, PhD or None at All?


Not so long ago, when someone had a bachelor’s , that was all that was needed to get on with a decent living. As a matter of fact, back in the day – as some would have noticed from their – you were seen as a top achiever if you had bagged a bachelor’s. All that most people got was an NCE, , or some other , and they got on with life quite well!
However, today, the trend is gradually changing. Even the bachelor’s does not seem to be enough to get you anywhere in this part of the world. It seems that a Master’s is gradually taking that pride of place that the bachelor’s used to occupy.
But then, the acquisition of a Master’s does not even guarantee a good job for anyone in a country like Nigeria today. It is common knowledge that there are thousands of bachelor’s, Master’s, and even Phd holders roaming the streets in search of jobs.
Meanwhile, there are some never got formal beyond the secondary level, and they are doing fine engaging in one business or the other. This then raises the question as to the level of which is necessary in order to be able to get a decent living in Nigeria.
InformationNigeria.org

Men: Exercising Before Breakfast causes More Fat Loss, Unclogs Arteries More


New study suggests that men who exercise before their morning meal are to be granted with greater fat loss and larger reductions in the level of fat in the blood.
According to the study published in the British Journal of Nutrition, those who did their walk before breakfast used up to 33 percent more fat than those who exercised after eating.
The results of the research conducted at Glasgow University in Scotland revealed that exercising on an empty stomach not only helps burn off more body fat and lose more weight, but also leads to a bigger reduction in artery-clogging blood fats.
“While exercise in itself is good, any done before breakfast may be extra beneficial, because it forces the body to rely on its stores of fat for energy,” explained study leader Dr Jason Gill from Glasgow University.
“If someone does an hour’s brisk walk every day for ten days or so, he will lose about a pound, which is about as fast as can be really expect to lose weight,” he noted.
Scientists concluded that exercising before the first meal of the day is more effective than the work out that is performed after it.
NewsRescue

How Nigeria’s Masai Ujiri rose to become the general manager for an American major league sports team

It started on the outdoor basketball courts in northern Nigeria where 13-year-old Masai Ujiri and his friends began to play for as long as their parents would allow. On Saturdays his mother bought him a copy of Sports Illustrated or Basketball Digest or any American magazine that could help fill his need for basketball. He and his friends watched VHS tapes of NBA games or basketball movies.
“All of the films,” said Ujiri, who is now the 40-year-old general manager of the Denver Nuggets. “Come Fly With Me, with Michael Jordan, and The Fish That Saved Pittsburgh, we watched that too.”
Sitting through The Fish That Saved Pittsburgh is the ultimate test of basketball love.
“Dr. J? For sure we watched that,” he said. “For sure.”
We were talking in advance of the Thanksgiving holiday, and Ujiri was accounting for his reasons to be thankful. His mother, a doctor, and his father, a nursing educationist in the university city of Zaria, raised him to be optimistic and outgoing. He grew to be 6-foot-4 and emigrated to the United States to play two years of basketball for a junior college in Bismarck, N.D. He later moved to Europe for six years of professional basketball where he earned as much as $5,000 per month.
“I wasn’t good enough to continue a pro career in terms of making money,” he said. “I saw that it wasn’t going anywhere. So a couple of times I decided to start attending some tournaments.”
His far-fetched goal was to become an NBA scout who traveled Africa in search of neglected talents. There were all kinds of reasons to doubt whether an African immigrant with little basketball pedigree could work in the front office of an NBA team, but he charged on all the same. He attended games in America and abroad to study the players and meet the coaches and administrators. Anytime he met anyone of interest he took down contact information in his black address book, and in the weeks ahead he reached out to them. He made friends easily because he worked hard at maintaining relationships, and also because he had information to share.
During an NBA summer league game in Boston, he met an American scout named David Thorpe, who eventually introduced him to college coaches.
“Now I was talking to Thad Matta, Billy Donovan and Leonard Hamilton,” Ujiri said. “I started having contact with Jim Calhoun and Roy Williams, and all of a sudden a lot of these coaches are calling me about players and I’m giving them information and telling them how good this kid is or whether he is good enough to play for them. I started placing kids in high schools. That is how we started building relationships with each other.”
In 2002, Ujiri was accompanying a young Nigerian player to a draft tryout in Orlando. Magic scouting director Gary Brokaw was impressed with his understanding of international players, and he introduced Ujiri to coach Doc Rivers and GM John Gabriel, who “hired” Ujiri as an unpaid scout for the next year. It may have been the most expensive job opportunity in NBA history — expensive for the employee.
“I used all my savings and miles to travel to tournaments around the world,” he said.
He paid his own way when he had to, or roomed with scouts or players when he could. He spent two months in Belgrade with his friend Obinna Ekezie, a Nigerian center who was playing for the club Red Star. One night Ujiri returned to the apartment but could not open the door. Ekezie, exhausted by two hard practices that day, had fallen asleep after accidentally leaving his key in the lock. Ujiri knocked and telephoned again and again before submitting to a long night on the cold tile floor. In the morning, when he knew his friend would be leaving for practice, Ujiri acted as if he was just now arriving back at the apartment in order to spare Ekezie from the guilt.
“I told the story in my camp last year when Obinna came to speak to the kids,” Ujiri said. “Obinna is a a big businessman in Nigeria — he’s doing really, really well — and I brought him to show the kids there are opportunities outside basketball, and that he used his money from the NBA and Europe to come back and start a travel business in Nigeria. When I told that story, Obinna was shocked. He had no idea.”
During that unpaid year Ujiri met Jeff Weltman, a young Nuggets executive. Weltman introduced Ujiri to GM Kiki Vandeweghe, who hired Ujiri on salary as an international scout. Ujiri would be hired away by Toronto’s Bryan Colangelo, and then hired back last year by the Nuggets as executive vice president in charge of basketball operations.
Within eight years of his unpaid introduction to the Magic, Ujiri had become the first native of Africa to oversee a major American sports franchise. As de facto GM, he had also inherited the headache of Carmelo Anthony’s public trade demand. But Ujiri never gave the appearance of being overwhelmed by the months of negotiations. He had spent a lifetime reaching for this challenge. In February, he sent Anthony to the Knicks in a midseason deal that launched the Nuggets’ sprint into the playoffs and spotlighted Ujiri for turning a position of weakness into strength for his franchise, much as he had done for himself.
There is less NBA work to be done at the moment, as the league awaits resolution of the lockout that threatens the entire 2011-12 season. So Ujiri seeks to assert another kind of leverage. Now that he has earned a position of NBA authority that has surpassed his expectations, he finds himself focusing his attentions on Africa. For the moment he is not allowed to have contact with NBA players, but he can continue to help the young players at home.
Masai Ujiri pulled the trigger on the Carmelo Anthony trade not long after becoming the Nuggets’ VP of basketball operations.
He has seen the expedited improvement of soccer coaching and facilities throughout Africa, where academies have been built to develop players who are now playing for the major clubs of Europe. Ujiri dreams of similar development for basketball in Africa. Every year he helps lead a Basketball Without Borders camp in Africa alongside colleagues from the NBA — players, coaches and league officials — who work with the best players on the continent. He also conducts two camps of his own making, one for the top 50 players of Nigeria, which is sponsored by Nestle Milo, and another for African big men, for which Ujiri himself is the sponsor with help from Nike.
“I see these kids coming here to play for Georgetown, Miami, St. John’s, Davidson, Pittsburgh, UConn, Virginia, Florida State, Loyola Marymount, Tennessee, Vanderbilt, Wyoming, Harvard, Syracuse, Quinnipiac,” he said, running out of breath. “They are all over the place, they are everywhere, including the big American high schools.
“Now, why aren’t they becoming more prominent players? Why aren’t more of them in the NBA? The problem is that they all started playing basketball at a very late age. The natural thing in Africa is to start playing soccer at 8 or 9. You go outside and you play like kids play basketball here, and you grow a feel for the game. In Africa, the kids start playing basketball at 16 or 17 or 18, and when they get an opportunity to come here, they have been playing for only one or two years.”
Ujiri dined in New York last week with NBA colleagues who share his ambition — Amadou Fall (who heads the NBA office in Johannesburg), Kim Bohuny (the NBA’s international ambassador) and Heidi Ueberroth (president of NBA International) — and they agreed a breakthrough in Africa is on the way.
“We all know it’s going to happen,” Ujiri said. “It’s just how long is it going to take?”
Consider the career path of the Nuggets’ GM, who grew up far away believing in a mythical fish that saved Pittsburgh. His desire to become part of the larger basketball world inspired him to reach out to those who could extend his reach. What he didn’t realize is that his helpers could also benefit from that reach. He became a means for them to understand and grasp the faraway places that are no longer beyond them.
It is through people like Masai Ujiri that the world shrinks and distant strangers become close friends.
“I really do believe the reason God has put me in the place I am is to tell this story and to give an opportunity to these kids in Africa,” he said. “The moment they start to play at a young age in Africa, it’s over. The moment somebody figures it out to put facilities up in Nigeria, the Congo, South Africa, so that the kids can play all day, it’s over. There is not even a question about the talent you are going to see coming from Africa.”
CP-Africa.com

[OPINION] Nigeria The Thirsty Fish

There’s a Yoruba riddle that goes thus ; “what lives in water and still stays thirsty”?. The answer is tongue. Similar to this riddle is a Yoruba proverb that says,”a fish cannot die of thirst in the river”.
Nigeria in this case is a tongue,living in a pool of water and slowly dying of thirst. As a country,Nigeria, has suffered for all the natural mineral resources given to her by God. Corruption has turned the king of Africa into a wandering refugee,traveling across Africa and the world to put food on their tables,in countries that survives on Nigeria’s natural mineral resources. Nigeria’s the highest producer of Oil in Africa,18th largest producer in the world,and has the 10th largest proven reserves in the world. Oil amounts to 80% of government earnings.
Nigeria produces 2.53million bpd (250,000bpd) of petroleum products, and imports 70% of refined petrol sold to citizens. Corruption has crippled our oil refining sector,we are now at the mercy of those we sell petroleum products to. Incessant fuel shortages plague us like a barren land, despite our high deposit of crude oil. The pump price of refined petrol keeps skyrocketing and affecting prices of food items. It’s a shock to see motorist sleeping in gas stations due to fuel shortages in a country,a country that is Americas highest supplier of petroleum products.
In addition to oil,Nigeria has the largest natural gas reserves in Africa, but have limited infrastructure in place to develop the sector. Natural gas that is related with oil production is mostly flared.
The inability to develop the natural gas sector had a downward effect on our economy. This affected the domestic usage and power generation use of natural gas,the price of a 12kg domestic cooking gas is around N3,000. Power outages are always blamed on shortage of gas supply in power generation stations. The government recently announced that they will create 40 gigawatts of capacity by 2020,achieving this goal will depend on the ability of the government to utilize current flared natural gas. It’s currently estimated that 76million Nigerians don’t have access to electricity. IEA data in 2009 indicate that electrification rate for Nigeria were 50% for the country as a whole. Constant power supply is still a mirage, and gas flaring is ongoing across the oil rigs scattered on our waters.
At a time,Nigeria,was the worlds largest exporter of groundnuts,cocoa and palm oil,significant producers of maize, sugar-cane, yams and citrus fruits. All of this products now comes in finished imported products,they’re now only found on shop racks,no more on our farms. Isn’t it amazing that we import canned corns,packed cocoa products and palm oil based products ?.We lack amidst plenty .
Limestone is another natural mineral resource we have in abundant,it is mined in various part of the the country in abundant capacity. Yearly,demand for cement is estimated around 17million metric tonnes,and the price keeps skyrocketing daily despite the large volume mined and produced in Nigeria. Cement production from Dangote cement factories and other cement factories in  Nigeria is well over 26million MT. Dangote groups combined factory produces 20million metric tones yearly,that is 17,000MT daily.
A bag of cement is sold at N1,800, making it one of the most expensive in Africa,despite been mined and produced on our own soil. Dangote cement is the largest cement production company in Africa,with market capitalization of almost $14billion on the Nigeria stock exchange market. Dangote groups most especially, and other cement production factory has made cement importation a thing of the past. But the irony of the issue is that,imported cements are cheaper than those produced locally. Same goes for other products. Another example is the locally grown Ofada and Ilesha ,they cost thrice the price of imported .
This is happening despite the vast majority of land at our disposal to plant this local to meet our consumption demands and cut money and manpower wasted on importation. Products extracted from our soils are now beyond or reach,we’re only capable of consuming imported goods with no proven origin and suspicious quality standard. We are now the  dump site of western experiments.
With all these resources at our disposal, we still lack amidst plenty,all the avenues to develop various sectors that will manage these resources has been crippled by corruption. We are already importing house hold goods from Ghana,a country that once depended on our economy to survive,now turned to our biggest market. Our fish is gradually swimming ashore to seek water,it’s immediate environment has been outsourced of useful and life supporting contents . A few set of people selfishly destroyed our working mechanism just to enrich themselves . We don’t have working refineries, good power generating sector,we even seek medical treatments in 3rd world countries and run a crippling education sector. Nigeria defied all the ideology of a fish not dying of thirst,our own fish fish might die of heat deep down the sea.
Oludayo Folarin
InformationNigeria.org

Ribadu Oil Panel: Of Oronsaye, Otti and the service of God and mammon, By Adeolu Ademoyo




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Adeolu Ademoyo: In the name of our heroes dead and living, I say that Messers Oronsaye and Otti are a public disgrace to Nigeria and Nigerian children
As I returned from a weekend Nigerian event here in the US, I got a call.  The caller called my attention to (i) our February essay  “Ribadu And The Metaphor Of a Moral Call” and (ii) the submission of the Ribadu Panel report. The caller is a patriotic Nigerian. From day One, the caller and I took different positions on whether Ribadu should accept the task from President Jonathan. I said Ribadu should, the caller then disagreed. Like all Nigerians, we waited with bated breadth for the outcome of the work of the Ribadu panel. In that essay, from a moral point, I defended why Ribadu ought to serve Nigerians by accepting President Jonathan’s call.
With the submission of the report and Messers Oronsaye and Otti’s outbursts, the caller wanted me to see why unfortunately he was right that Ribadu ought not to have served the country in that capacity. If given Messers Oronsaye and Otti’s outburst and if my caller was right that Ribadu ought not to have accepted the task, was I then wrong to have argued that Ribadu ought to accept to serve the country?  I do not think so. However, then and now, this is the way the moral question is put and will always be put.
I had written at the time: “But this moral question has an indivisible duality to it.  Mr. Ribadu’s historical task is that of a moral agent which serves as: (i) a common resource, which is a universal estate of all Nigerians; and (ii) and the cleansing mechanism of an industry, which is a cesspool of corruption.
A moral agent is a public agent answerable only to the public even if the “enabling factor” for its emergence is a morally corrupt government such as Mr. Goodluck Jonathan’s government.  We have good examples in the history of our country to illustrate these “moral calls” on some of our uniquely placed compatriots with strong moral talents and virtues. Dr. Tai Solarin’s work as the head of Nigeria’s public complaints commission is just one example.
Invariably, moral talents such as Mr. Ribadu are always caught in the dilemma of either keeping their talents to themselves, privatize such talents, or putting them at the service of the people. The problem with our country is that moral talents live paradoxical lives because they are constantly faced with the moral challenge to serve or not to serve; and tragically, Nigeria has never had the good fortune of the correct enabling factor of governance to harvest all the moral talents that abound, and make them work for the public good.” (PREMIUM TIMES, February 12, 2012).
I place this defence before readers, and I invite them to fault on basis of reason my defence that Ribadu should serve.  I believe that my defense was right then and now. But I concede that I failed to anticipate Messers Stephen Oronsaye and Bon Otti immorality and their service of Mammon.
Let us pretend that similar attempts at investigating oil subsidy which led to the  “Farouk Lawan /Otedola” stalemate does not exist.  Please I am not drawing a complete analogy here  because Farouk Lawan is not a moral analogy of Ribadu even when Otedola (in Farouk Lawan case)  is a moral analogy of  Stephen Oronsaye and Bon Otti   (in Ribadu case).  So let us cover our eyes and pretend that the two cases are different.
Since the need to be faithful to facts is crucial in this season, I will present what the panel members say in their own words. Mr. Stephen Oronsaye and  Mr. Ben Oti  argued against the submission of the Ribadu report as it is on procedural ground  because according to them the “process” at arriving at the report is “faulty”. Mr. Oronsaye said: “No matter how elegant a house may be, if it is built on faulty foundation it will collapse…” Suppose Mr. Oronsaye  had told Nigerians all the truth and facts in his assertions, his objection is therefore not about the content of the report but about the process of arriving at the content-a content Oronsaye had described as “harsh”.
A member of the panel countered Mr. Oronsaye and said while members sent their views on the report to be submitted and  a timeline was set, Messers Oronsaye and Otti did not  send their views.
Mr. Ribadu, the panel chairman observed that though the panel worked for about 90 days, Mr. Oronsaye  was consistently absent for and from he panel’s  work. Mr. Oronsaye attended ONLY ONE MEETING. Though impossible, but suppose the only ONE DAY meeting Mr. Oronsaye attended lasted for  fifteen hours, it means Mr. Oronsaye who is the deputy chair of the panel  WORKED FOR ONLY FIFTEEN HOURS  out of 90   WORKDAYS OF THE PANEL.
Mr. Ribadu asserted further that the panel was set up as “an outside of industry panel” . My understanding of this feature of the panel is  that it is conceived as an  “outside of industry panel” to fulfill a basic test of moral objectivity in its work. But Mr. Ribadu observed that during the time the panel started working, Mr. Oronsaye became a member of he NNPC board, and Mr. Bon Otti became the Chief Director of Finance of NNPC.  NNPC is one of the units the Ribadu panel is supposed to investigate.
In view of these stated facts the following is the moral question. Even if Messers Oronsanye and Otti are right about process, should they have continued to be members of the Ribadu panel after they became officials of NNPC –one of the units under investigation? Shouldn’t they have refused the NNPC jobs or resign honourably from the Ribadu panel?  In an ethical situation, the claim of an agent is   irredeemably flawed if there is a conflict of interest.  And there is one in the case of Messers Oronsaye and Otti.
A moral conflict of interest is a higher moral question than Oronsaye’s “process”. Or paradoxically, it is not impossible that Mr. Oronsaye was actually referring to himself and Mr. Otti’s NNPC jobs when he talked about a “flawed process” and a “fault” for he ought to know that he and Mr. Otti have compromised themselves on the Ribadu panel by taking the NNPC jobs. In other words, Mr. Oronsaye was being autobiographical in his so-called questioning of the panel. Given their moral conflict of interest, Messers Oronsaye and Otti are actually the flawed moral process and fault line Mr. Oronsaye referred to.  The problem is that they refused to resign because hey had an immoral and dubious job to do as plants in the panel.
Beside the fact that Mr. Oronsaye worked for less than a day on a task that lasted for  about 90 days, there is an avoidable conflict of interest in his and Mr. Bon Otti’s continuous participation in the Ribadu panel.  These two men refused to resolve that moral conflict of interest. They waited as “members” of the panel until the day of submission to raise a “procedural issue”. Messers Oronsaye and Otti’s continuous membership of the panel and their morally dishonest “outburst” is analogous to  a rapist being asked to investigate his own act of rape!
In the Diaspora, one’s family  is one’s first Nigerian community. My family and I listened to the tape and the  assertions of some members of the  panel. After we finished listening to this tape on PREMIUM TIMES, my eldest child looked at me straight in the eyes  in the American style  straight talk and immediately  took his eyes away in  deference to the African moral code of “ as a child you do not look your elders in the face even when you are right”. But he asked “Papa, you said we should love Nigeria, yes we will, but who is Mr. Oronsaye?”
This is my son. I am his father. I am African. I am Nigerian, yet I could  not look my son straight in the face for my face dropped embarrassingly at what we so-called fathers and adults do to our children by being morally fraudulent right before our children. I felt ashamed about the  intense and sickening immorality in what  this men who are parents too, these fathers  called Messers Oronsaye  and Otti had done to our children. Mr. Oronsaye worked for less than a day on a task of 90 days and he talked about “a procedural issue”!.  Messers Oronsaye and Otti were appointed as members of a “Ribadu outside the industry”   independent panel  to ensure moral objectivity, Messers Oronsaye and Otti went to mammon to eat, they went into the same industry to take jobs during the lifetime of the panel.
On the basis of these I make the following assertions. I own this opinion, it is mine and I free the PREMIUM TIMES from any prosecution. I am putting myself on the line for Messers Oronsaye and Otti to take me to court for defamation.  In the name of our heroes dead and living who beckon us to say the truth to help our dear country, I say that Messers Oronsaye and Otti are a public disgrace to Nigeria and Nigerian children. They are the moral fault line who were deliberately planted in the Ribadu panel to attempt to ‘rubbish” the panel’s work after the fact.  They are the Otedola in the Ribadu panel. They have lost the respect of at least one Nigerian child. They are beneath contempt for they are pieces of worthless rags. They do not deserve to serve in any capacity in any Nigerian institution.
I challenge Messers Oronsaye and Otti to take me to court for public defamation.  My son and I will be in Lagos or Abuja or any Nigerian court  at cost to myself – in other words at no cost to anyone except myself. The only condition I will ask of the court is that the court allows me to publicly point Messers Oronsaye and Otti to my son. My son had asked who these men are. I want my son to know face to face those who continue to destroy and desecrate our dear country and the future of our youths. These  disgraceful and  morally questionable characters are also free to bring their children to court.
PremiumTimes