Monday 10 June 2013

Dame Patience must not push her Goodluck | Dame Patience, Our President’s darling wife – Reuben Abati



Dame Patience must not push her Goodluck | Dame Patience, Our President’s darling wife – Reuben Abati

Editor: This article clearly shows the genesis of the Amaechi-Jonathan feud. Dr. Abati did not spare words for the First Lady at the time. Well, you don’t expect him to write this about his boss’ wife today do you?
The Guardian Thursday, 27th Aug 2010
Opinion – By Reuben Abati
DEMOCRACY is readily associated with freedom: the freedom to be free in many respects and increasingly in Nigeria, many of our compatriots, particularly persons in positions of privilege and authority confuse this with the right to be disagreeable. The sober truth is that democracy is about rights and responsibilities, a democratic dispensation therefore cannot be a licence for disagreeable conduct as a norm; just as the possession of power in any form does not guarantee the right to be reckless or to ignore the etiquette required of office holders. Anyone in the corridors of power, either by chance or right, or appointment, is expected to behave decorously.
Dame Patience Jonathan, as she is now referred to, our President’s wife, failed the test this week in Okrika, Rivers State. It is trite knowledge that there is a critical difference between Yenagoa and Abuja, and a world of difference between being the wife of a Deputy Governor/Governor/Vice president and being the wife of Nigeria’s No 1 citizen. When people suddenly find themselves in such latter position, prepared or unprepared, anywhere in the world,  they are taken through a crash programme in finishing and poise and made to realize that being the wife of an important man comes with serious responsibilities lest they sabotage the same person that they should be supporting.
If Dame Patience went through such re-orientation, the course was incomplete. This week, we got a feedback drawn from her visit to Rivers state to launch her NGO  – the Women for Change Initiative, when she ended up in Okrika, her home town. This homecoming became an egoistic show-off as she openly contradicted the state Governor, offering him unsolicited lessons on how to develop the Okrika water front and school system, in addition to pointed comments on the use of the English language. The Governor had reportedly insisted that his administration must demolish some houses which adjoin the schools in Okrika in order to create a proper learning environment. Dame Patience disagreed.
She then gave an unsolicited lecture on the land tenure system telling the Governor: “I want you to get me clear. I am from here. I know the problems of my people so I know what I am talking…”   The Governor tried to explain his administration’s policy and the larger public interest. The Dame reportedly cut him short: “But what I am telling you is that you always say you must demolish; that word must you use is not good. It is by pleading. You appeal to the owners of the compound because they will not go into exile. Land is a serious issue.” Wao! “that word must..is not good.” We must all commit that to memory as we re-learn Practical English according to Patience Jonathan!
If it is in the place of the President’s wife to teach a state Governor how to run his state, it is definitely not in her place to veto a state policy (the reason the governor used the word “must”), not even her husband has such powers. It seemed as if Dame Patience Jonathan was determined to impress her kith and kin. She told them she had directed the governor not to demolish their houses. Then, she left straight for the airport  obviously having overstayed her welcome and having behaved like a bad guest.  She was scheduled to visit the prisons to grant amnesty to some inmates (is that really her duty or something that should be in her itinerary? ); she was also meant to commission some projects. The face-off between her and the governor put paid to all that.
On the eve of her arrival, a group which calls itself “the Okrika Political Stakeholders Forum” and “the people of Kirikese” had actually placed an advert in the papers welcoming “our amiable daughter and sister…to Rivers state and your home town Okrika.” They also brought up the issue of “the land reclamation and shore protection project at Oba Ama, Okrika being undertaken by the Rivers state government.” (Daily Sun, August 23, 2010, p. 2).  Either on the strength of this advertorial or private consultations, Dame Patience must have felt compelled to be a partisan stakeholder and intercessor. She needed to put Rotimi Amaechi, the state Governor in his place and that was what did. She recommended “pleading,” – that advice is actually meant for her. A state Governor is a duly elected official; and in a Federal system, he is not answerable to the President, and nowhere is the president granted the powers of a Headmaster over state governors. In Okrika, Dame Patience behaved so impatiently and spoke to Governor Amaechi as if he is on the staff of the Presidency. It may not be  her fault though. Amaechi caused it all by bringing himself to such level by undertaking to debrief Dame Patience about his administration’s programmes and activities in the misguided hope of getting cheap political endorsement.  He should have asked his wife to attend to her. On the issue of land, Dame Patience should be reminded that the Land Use Act, Section 1 thereof, says the state Governor holds the land in trust for the people. Land matters in the state are beyond the ken of the wife of the President!
The wife of the President of Nigeria, or a state Governor, or a local council chairman, is not a state official. The same applies to husbands if the gender is reversed. He or she is unknown to the constitution or the governance structure.  Recent history has however made it a convention to have the spouses of persons in such positions under the guise of providing support, play some ceremonial roles. This has been routinely abused. Under the Jonathan presidency, Dame Patience Jonathan even got a special allocation in the original budget for the 2010 Golden jubilee anniversary whereas she has no official, financial reporting responsibilities! The international standard is that spouses in these circumstances must not only appear but be seen to be above board like Caesar’s wife. They must not misbehave like Marie Antoinette.
When Cherie Blair, wife of former British PM, Tony Blair started buying up houses, apartments and antique furniture, the public raised questions. It didn’t matter that she was a professional in her own right, a Queen’s Counsel with a traceable source of income. There were also questions about the scope of Hillary Clinton’s influence during her husband’s Presidency: Americans wanted to be sure that it was the man they elected that was in charge, not his wife. A couple of weeks ago, the American public was up in arms against Michelle Obama and her poll rating dropped drastically after a visit to Spain where she and her daughter reportedly stayed in a $7, 000 a night hotel.
Much earlier, Nancy Reagan was also the butt of public criticism, with people asking: who is she? And this is not a female thing. In Britain, Prince Phillip, the Queen’s husband, is constantly criticized for putting his foot in his mouth. He once said for example that “British women can’t cook.”  He told a visiting Nigerian President, all dressed up in babariga (name withheld): “you look like you’re ready for bed.” During a state visit to China, he told British students: “if you stay much longer, you’all be slitty-eyed.” Prince Phillip’s supporters insist that he is honest, but the majority ask: how is the Queen coping with such a man who is perpetually saying something offensive? There may be persons who defend Dame Patience’s aggressive style, but some of us ask: how is the President coping?
Since Dr Jonathan assumed office, he and his wife have been practically on the road. The Dame has travelled from one state to the other, under the auspices of the Women for Change Initiative. In every state she tells the women to vote and “make sure your vote counts if you like my husband.” Is she now a partisan politician? The Jonathans must be told that Nigeria does not have a co-Presidency. We have only one president and his name is Goodluck Ebele Jonathan. And by the way, what does Dame Patience Jonathan do for a living? She obviously does not have to deal with the challenges of rotation and zoning in her home, unlike the three wives of the Adamawa Governor, Murtala Nyako for whom zoning and rotation have become topical subjects or the wives of South African President Jacob Zuma – that is why she can afford to be so meddlesome!
When she misbehaves as she did in Okrika, she creates the impression that her husband is not in control of his own home. First ladies are prominent figures but their conduct is an eternal subject of public interest. In Nigeria, there was Victoria Gowon, there was also Ajoke Muhammed: dignified and restrained.  There was Maryam Babangida – she was influential but no one could accuse her of verbal recklessness;  Mrs Abdusalami  Abubakar was a court judge, totally self-effacing, No major social party was complete without Mrs Stella Obasanjo, yet she controlled her tongue. Mrs Turai Yar’Adua was described as the power behind the throne and she proved that during the period of her husband’s illness but she was carefully reticent. At the state level, there was Remi Tinubu in Lagos state and Onari Duke in Cross River state who have both conducted themselves responsibly in and out of office. The new First Lady likes to travel, party, and talk outside the script. People are beginning to learn to read her lips in order to understand her husband. Dame Patience must not push her Goodluck.
Omojuwa

Assessing President Jonathan

By: Sam Nda-Isaiah 
President Jonathan’s mid-term report in which he scored himself A+ is still causing outrage across the country. This has further been compounded by the ministerial briefings/assessments that followed. It is only in Jonathan’s strange school that students set their own examinations, mark their own scripts, announce the result and expect the job market to take them seriously.
Jonathan should allow Nigerians to assess him. The president and his minions cannot be clapping for themselves when the entire country is in total disorder and disarray. And Nigerians cannot clap for the president because, as the late Chief MKO Abiola would have put it, “you cannot clap with one hand.” Many Nigerians have lost their limbs or their shirts or both under President Jonathan. The only people clapping today are Jonathan himself and the small coterie around him who import their beef from Harrods in London. Since the president covets praises, he can still get commendation within his remaining two years if he starts becoming president. I am going to help him by giving him an idea of how.
The chief responsibility of any government is the protection of its citizens. Indeed, the Nigerian constitution declares that the security and welfare of the people is the responsibility of government. So far, the president has scored a resounding F9 here. His F9 is actually with a distinction. He can start working on this right away by ensuring that the police and other security agencies get the funds that are budgeted for them and ensuring that such budgeted funds are actually deployed as appropriated. The president should find out what percentage of their budgets the police have been receiving since he came to power. He must also vote enough funds for the training and retraining of the nation’s police officers and other security agents if we are to overcome the current challenges that we face. The police as we have them today are bereft.
Nigeria currently boasts 370,000 police personnel. This is scandalous for a nation of 170 million people. It simply shows that President Jonathan has not given a serious thought to security matters. The ubiquitous JTF we see in several states, which by the way has become an avenue for unbridled corruption, is certainly not the answer to the dangerous situation in which we find ourselves today. Every serious country needs a strong police force. For a population of 170 million, Nigeria should have no fewer than one million policemen. Let us start by recruiting the so many unemployed able-bodied graduates that roam aimlessly across the country today into the police force and give them first-class training. In any case, we had better quickly recruit them into the nation’s forces before they are recruited into the sundry criminal forces that abound in the country. The nation needs to invest heavily in security because security should be the first order of business of any country that desires progress.
The second priority I recommend for President Jonathan is massive job creation – not the joke that his ministers shared last week. One of Jonathan’s funny ministers spoke about creating 350,000 jobs. Does the president know what is at issue here? As I write this piece, we have about 80 per cent unemployment rate among Nigerian graduates. If this is not urgently tackled, Boko Haram will be a child’s play in Nigeria within the decade. A drive to create 350,000 jobs? They can’t be serious.
Job creation for all governments of the world, whether it is the government of the United States or China or Singapore or Togo, is always a very serious business and therefore given very serious attention and focus. It is always a national security matter. Nigeria must create at the very minimum 10 million new jobs in the next five years if we are to avoid a catastrophic implosion. And, as I said, this is the barest minimum. To therefore promise to create 350,000 jobs clearly shows that the Jonathan people do not know what they are doing. Creating 10 million jobs in five years means creating an average of two million jobs annually. There is only one major way to achieve this, which is to put in place entrepreneurial policies that will boost the creation of at least five million new small businesses. A small business creates between two and five new jobs, which means that by enforcing policies that would create five million new small businesses, we will be creating between 10 million and 25 million new jobs in five years. This requires serious commitment to achieve and it is very possible. President Paul Kagame of Rwanda is creating jobs by developing policies that promote entrepreneurship just like Bill Clinton did during his presidency in the United States. It is because of the 22 million new jobs President Clinton created during his eight years as president that he has become the most popular former president alive, in spite of his numerous scandals.
A serious president can easily create 25 million new jobs in Nigeria in only five years. It should be much easier in Nigeria than in developed societies like the US. Apart from the massive recruitment of graduates into the police that I suggested, the place to start would be from the education sector: change the mindset of the average Nigerian graduate. The usual thing is for students to graduate and wait for good-paying jobs. The thing to do to achieve this drastic goal would be to change graduates from seekers of good-paying jobs to job creators themselves – turning them into entrepreneurs. The chief business of an average Nigerian is business, so it would be good to work on the entrepreneurial instinct of our youths; and there is nothing hard here. We now live in an IT-driven world. The world has changed in the last 15 years and the kinds of jobs available have also changed. Therefore, our education system must change accordingly. IT makes entrepreneurship easier. South Korea has succeeded hugely in this area.
To create jobs, Nigeria must also invest heavily in infrastructure. Nigeria currently has a housing deficit of 17 million units. The Jonathan government has declared through Ms Ammal Pepple, the minister of housing, that it intends to build one million housing units annually. That sounds good except that nothing is happening at the moment. Even if they started tomorrow, the government’s strategy would require the banks to fund the construction in a private sector-driven scheme. With the current interest rates, if the banks fund the construction of the houses, only millionaires will buy them. Actually, building one million houses annually by the government will create approximately 30 million new jobs annually because architects, quantity surveyors, engineers, estate agents, insurance companies, banks, labourers, food sellers, facility managers, block moulders, etc, will be involved across the country. So that’s a good proposition. But the honest way any government can do this is not ask the banks to fund it as Jonathan intends to. According to Audu Ogbeh, Nigeria has N2.9 trillion stuck in the pension funds account. He should know because he was one of the pundits that created the pension funds when he and others helped President Obasanjo with the pension reforms. This N2.9 trillion could be loaned to this housing scheme project and paid back to the pension fund after the sale of the houses with minimal interest. That way, the houses can be sold at affordable rates to Nigerians and the pension funds would also be boosted because the money would be repaid with some interest. It is about time in any case to put the pension funds to good use instead of the current massive theft that we see.
If we do not do something urgent about the current 17 million housing deficit, we will be heading towards a catastrophe. If truth be told, the one million housing units annually is even grossly insufficient for a country with a 17 million housing deficit and population growth like ours. Because what that means is that it will take 17 years to wipe out the current deficit, by which time Nigeria’s population would be approximately 290 million as against the current 170 million, according to our current population growth rate estimates. That means that the current deficit figures would have more than tripled by the time we get there. The target should be between three million and five million housing units annually, and this is possible. The problem with the Jonathan government is that it is not spending enough time to do the hard work of thinking. In 50 years, Nigeria’s population would be approximately 400 million and this is not funny.
We can go on and on. The policy of massive investment in infrastructure should also include road networks, ports, and airports expansion. If we are the biggest country in Africa, then, we should work to have the biggest airports that would make Nigeria the hub of Africa especially as we are strategically located in the middle of the continent. We should also have the biggest ports and not cede revenues to the Cotonou port because of corruption. To achieve any of these, the current corruption levels must stop. We will achieve nothing with the current level of looting of the nation. The current theft of crude oil – both official and unofficial – must also be stopped by all means and at all costs. Angola has overtaken Nigeria in oil production even though we are still officially called Africa’s biggest oil producer simply because we cannot manage ourselves well. Nigeria’s oil production dropped from 2.6 million barrels per day to less than 1.7 million barrels per day this year due to oil theft and “peace” in the Niger Delta. Angola has, on the other hand, inched upwards to almost two million barrels per day. That nonsense must also stop and it is squarely the responsibility of President Jonathan to stop the thieves. With a very serious government, Nigeria has the capacity to produce four million barrels per day. And we better do that quickly and get the full benefits because, in a decade, there will be a glut in the oil market. The shale revolution in the United States which will turn the US into a net exporter of crude will ensure this. A few weeks ago, it was also revealed that China has more shale gas potential than even the United States. And what is more, in 10 years, there will be 19 African countries producing oil. In Africa, we would effectively have Nigeria, Libya, Algeria, Egypt, Angola, Kenya, Somalia, Ethiopia, South Sudan, Ghana, Chad, Niger, Gabon, Congo, Cameroun, Tunisia, Equitorial Guinea, DRC and Cote d’ Ivoire as the continent’s oil producers. Many more will join in Asia and South America. When that time comes, we would be lucky if oil sold for $20 a barrel.
With all these facts, Jonathan needs to start doing his work as president. At the moment, he is not. And he should stop clapping for himself.

EARSHOT
FG’s Confused Policies On Boko Haram
Boko Haram and other terrorist groups flourish in Nigeria because President Jonathan is totally confused about what to do. First, it was that he would not grant amnesty to ghosts, as he called the insurgents. That could be an appropriate position if you had a strong reason for it and pursued your goals decisively to defeat the insurgents. But that’s not what Jonathan is doing. He simply said no dialogue because he thought it sounded cute to say so. Then, when he was forced to recant, he decided to set up a dialogue committee with a couple of people in his government as members. And just when the dialogue committee was beginning to record preliminary successes, he suddenly declared that he had proscribed Boko Haram simply because it appeared that the United States had done so. Now, there is confusion. Can anyone negotiate or dialogue with a banned organisation without running foul of the law? You cannot dialogue with a proscribed organisation without becoming guilty of a crime against the nation. Therein lies the total confusion that President Jonathan has created all by himself.
 Leadership

Tuesday 4 June 2013

Nigerian lawmakers order probe of N5.6bn NNPC pipeline protection contract


vandalised pipeline, Photo: nigerianbestforum.com
The lawmakers said the NNPC’s actions was a violation of existing laws.
The House of Representatives on Wednesday ordered a probe of the N5.6 billion that NNPC spends yearly on oil pipeline protection in ‘violation’ of the NSCDC Act.
The House gave the directive in a resolution following a motion moved by Robinson Uwak (PDP-Akwa Ibom), which was adopted without debate.
The three committees charged with the investigations are those of Petroleum Resources Upstream); Interior; National Security and Intelligence.
The report of the investigation is expected to be presented to the house within four weeks.
According to Mr. Uwak, the NNPC spends N5.6 billion yearly on the protection of oil pipelines in violation of the NSCDC Act, which empowers the corps to protect the pipelines.
Section 3 (1) e states that: “The Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps shall maintain 24 hours surveillance over infrastructure, sites and projects of the federal, states and local government;
“The NSCDC has powers to arrest without a warrant, detain, investigate and institute legal proceedings against any person who is reasonably suspected to have committed an offence under this Act.
“Or is involved in any power transmission lines, or oil pipelines, Nigeria Postal Service (NIPOST) cables, equipment, water board pipes and equipment vandalism”.
He said that the amount of money being spent on pipeline contract could be further invested in the corps.
“The huge sums of money spent in servicing the pipeline contract could be invested in funding the NSCDC to enable it carry out its statutory function rather than giving it to a private firm in violation of the law,” he said.
The legislator said that the mobilisation of officers of the corps to locations and operations not covered by its Act violated the provisions of the Act and reduced the number of officers to carry out the duty.
He said that the violation of the Act by the corporation also violates the objectives of the 1999 constitution, as amended to minimise waste.
Meanwhile, the N259.6 billion 2013 budget of the Nigerian capital, Abuja, has passed the second reading at the floor of the House of Representatives.
The sum of N48 billion is for personnel costs, while N55.9 billion is for overhead costs and N155.7 billion for capital projects.
The chairman of the committee on Abuja, Emmanuel Jime (PDP-Benue), said that the budget was critical to the execution of the Abuja Lighter Rail project and completion of some health facilities within the territory.
He urged members to support the passage of the budget for a second reading.

The Creation Of Mid-West Region And The Life And Times Of Senator Dalhton Ogieva Asemota O.B.E By NOWAMAGBE A. OMOIGUI



On this 50th anniversary of his death, it is appropriate to recall the words of the great man we are gathered here to commemorate.

Like the peace-maker and quiet organizer he was throughout his life, this public announcement titled “APPEAL FOR UNITY,” captured his deep passion for and personification of the national dream for theMidwest region. It was published in 1963 by Ja Isumah at a critical juncture during the battle for the constitutional creation of the Midwest region, fore-runner to Edo and Delta States of present day Nigeria.

“APPEAL FOR UNITY”
March 25, 1963.
Through the medium of this second edition of “You and Midwest Plebiscite – What you must know”, I am once more appealing to the people of the Midwest to study this pamphlet very carefully as they will deride not only inspiration also encouragement to go the front with renewed energy to spur our people up to vote “YES” in the plebiscite.

We are grateful to God that we have fought relentlessly a most difficult task and the Promised Land is now vividly in sight of us.

Our destiny is in our hands, as, it is said, “every man is the architect of his own fortune.”
I pray to God to take away the scales from our eyes in order to see not only the beauty of the Promised Land, but also to realize the wisdom in working united to enter the Midwest region in peace and perfect harmony.

On this occasion, I would like to remind Mid-westerners once more that we all sprang from one stock and there should be no reason that we should not unite to rebuild our kingdom and make the Midwest region an important region not only to be reckoned with in the Federation of Nigeria as the most prosperous region of which we could justly be proud but also as a region that would be the envy of other lands.

Whatever obstacles that may be placed in our way, in any shape or form, I pray God may be with us to overcome them.

We should all sink our personal differences and work hard as a team towards the realization of our national dream – the creation of a Mid-West region.

By Hon. Senator Dahlton Asemota O.B.E.
(Chairman Midwest Planning Committee)”
As fate would have it, Hon. Senator Dahlton Asemota O.B.E., did not live to see the Promised Land. He died on May 2nd, 1963. the successful plebiscite was followed by the constitutional creation of the Midwest region of Nieria, inaugurated on August 9th 1963. It was a day many felt was the real date of independence of the people of the Benin and Delta provinces from British rule.

Through the prism of his life and times, let us recall Hon. Senator Dahlton Asemota O.B.E’s role in the creation of the Midwest region.

THE DEATH AND FUNERAL OF SENATOR DAHLTON OGIEVA ASEMOTA, O.B.E.
At the end of April 1963, Senator Asemota came to Lagos to attend a scheduled meeting of the Senate. The senate adjourned on April 29th, and so he made plans to return to Benin on May 2nd. On May 1st, however, he woke up early and telephoned his older brother Pa Elekhuoba Asemota to tell him that he would be returning to Benin the next day. Then he went to the General Hospital in Lagos to see Dr. Laja in follow-up to a Chest X-ray he had earlier ordered. Dr. Laja gave him a prescription, some of which the Hospital pharmacy did not have, so he was asked to find them at a private pharmacy. From the hospital he went shopping but returned home at about 3 pm to take his medications on an empty stomach. After this he left for the Commercial Medicine Store on Nnamdi Azikiwe Street owned by his friend, Senator Wusu from Badagry. On arrival he handed the prescription to his friend who in turn gave it to his assistants to get the medications. Meanwhile, Senatro Asemota was resting on the counter along with his wife, Onaiwu, waiting on the prescription. Then suddenly, and without warning he slumped.

He was then rushed to the General Hospital Casualty department. His wife then came to my family house on MacDonald Avenue in Ikoyi, Lagos, where we were neighbours to Chief Anthony Enahoro on our back side and Dr. Rilwan, a well known Lagos physician, on the other. Dr. Rilway, my parents, and Mrs. Onaiwu Asemota rushed back to the hospital to find out what was happening, only to be directed to the mortuary where the Senator’s lifeless body was lying. It was my father that had unenviable responsibility to break the devastating news to Chiefs Omo-Osagie and Okotie-Eboh. Chief Omo-Osagie notified Pa Elekhuoba Asemota in Benin.

Meanwhile, my father went to Dr. Laja’s house to get permission for release and embalmment. While on their way to the hospital, the Doctor said the Senator had had an enlarged Heart on Chest X-ray. When Senator Asemota asked him how his Chest X-ray looked, he told him: “It is okay papa” to which the Senator responded by smiling.

Senator Dalton Asemota, the consensus builder did not live to see the Midwest he worked so hard to make possible. Descendant from Chief Asemota, the Eson and descendant and of the Nehenua family of Benin, and Madam Iyeye Ero, the later Senator was buried (with all the trappings of a national funeral) in the Asemota family compound after a sermon led by Reverend Akinluyi at the St. Matthew’s Anglican Cathedral in Benin City (personal communication, Mr. DA Omoigui). He was replaced as Chairman of the Midwest Planning Committee by Chief Morgan Agbontaen.

Shortly after the Senator died, in testimony to his many roles in civic life, Anglican Bishop Agori Iwe, first Bishop of Benin Diocese delivered a presidential address to the Synod. He stated: “JUST last week, the 2nd of May, we were badly shocked with another sad news of the sudden death of one of our prominent members, Senator Dahlton Ogieva Asemota, High tributes have been paid to his honour by many eminent persons. One among them, was Chief Dennis Osadebe, President of the Nigerian Senate. He said – “Senator Asemota was one, very beloved in Benin. He was of jovial nature. When I learnt of his death tears filled my eyes. His position in the Senate will be difficult to fill.”

And what is our tribute to this illustrious man? He was the prime mover for the creation of Benin Diocese. He spoke vehemently for it in the Synod of Ondo-Benin Diocese, 1959; and met me in Ughelli the same year for talk about the creation of the new Diocese. He was the chairman of Building Committee of our Cathedral. His name was among those who are to address this Synod today.

“There is a remedy for everything but death. The best of men cannot suspend their fate; the good die early; and the bad die late”. May his soul rest in peace?” (http:/www.waado.org/Biographies/ Agorilwe/AppendixOne.html) Let us go back to the beginning.
The Birth Of Ogieva Osemwota Ogbewe

In the same year that Northern and Southern Protectorates of Nigeria were created by the British, Iyase Okizi joined his ancestors. It is recorded that Mr. H. M. Douglas, (District Officer) took Benin Chiefs to visit Owo that year. It was also the year that Miller Brothers opened a factory in Benin (Egharevba: A short history of Benin)

The year of course, was 1900, Iyeye Ero, wife of Iyoha Osaemwota Ogbewe, (later anglicized Asemota) was delivered in Benin City of her second son, Ogieva.

Ogieva was born into a large polygamous family, all of whom resided originally in the Ogbe quarters of the city. It was his mother Iyeye Ero that acquired the land on Igun Street for herself and her three boys – Elekhuoba, Ogieva and Adun – in deference to the reality that burials were not permitted in Ogbe. His full list of brothers comprised Omorodion, Omoregie, Elekhuoba (my late maternal grandfather), Adun, Itafo, Emokpae, Efosa, Ediagbonya, Igbinosun, Kpoba, Ozo, and Enobakhare. His sisters were Uwubamwen, Aiwekhoe, Omwanghe, Imade and Enehizena. He would come to be known in adult life (as in death) as HON. SENATOR DAHLTON ogieva asemota, o.b.e – the first Senator to represent the Benin province in independent post-colonial Nigeria.

His official first name, Dahlton, in adult life, which is well known internationally, is likely of Swedish origin. It has no known meaning in English, but a similar name, also well known, spelled Dalton, is of Old English origin, meaning, “from the valley town; the settlement in the valley.” Interestingly, Benin City, where Ogieva was born, is, as is well known situated in the Ikpoba river valley, bordered in party by Ikpoba Hill. But without knowing the precise circumstances under which he took on the name “Dalton,” the thinking behind the choice remains speculative.

On the other hand, his first given name at birth, Ogieva, in Edo means, “partner” or ‘mate’, a name usually reserved for a second child born to partner the first, in his case, Ogieva was born as the second child of his mother Iyeye Ero, after his maternal older brother Elekhuoba, but ahead of his maternal younger brother, Adun.According to Hon. Justice I. O. Aluyi, in his tribute to the late Senator, “I recall that before his death, he requested me to come and write his WILL. I went to him and asked him for his full name that will be used in the will and he gave me his full names as Dalton Ogieva Asemota. I told him that I bear the same name as his surname but that my name is Osemwota and not Asemota. He quickly replied that my own name was the right name and that his own Asemota has no meaning in Benin.

Osemwota is a prayerful wish for longevity abut Asemota in Benin is meaningless. I still wrote the will for him using his name “Asemota” but I doubt if he ever signed the will before his sudden death in Lagos in 1963.
By the time he joined his ancestors, on May 2nd, 1963, Senator Dahlton Asemota, O. B. E. was survived by his spoused Nwume (affectionately called Onaiwu) and fourteen (14) begotten children. They include Mr. Uwagbae Asemota, Mrs. Izogie Joy Modupe Ozigbo-Esere J. P. FWACN, - Reetired Assistant Director of Health & Head of Department of Public Health Nursing UBTH, Barrister Mrs. Oghogho I. Ayanru, - Retired Chief Radiographer & head of department of Radiology Depatment UBTH, Mr. Aiyudubie Asemota – Retired Chief Clinical Biochemist, Univeristy of Calabar Teaching Hospital, Engr. Imaregheghe Asemota, Mrs. Aiyomorhuo Ehiemua, Mrs. Nogieru O. Igbinoba. – Retired Assistant Director, Nursing Service/ Project Manger. Edo State Agency for the control of AIDS (SACA), Mr. Ikponmwosa Asemota, Mrs Edomwande Chukwuka John, Pharm Osayande Asemota, Mrs. Osana Ogunnowo, Mr. Isibor Asemota, and Mr. Igbinosa Asemota. One of his daughters, Omozee Asemota, died young in an unfortunate accident along Akpakpava road not long after her late father.

WHY OnAiWu?
Senator Dahlton Asemota’s spouse, “Onaiwu”, actually hailed originally from Onitsha. Her first given Onitsha name at birth was Nwume, meaning “This one will not die.” Translated to Edo, it means! The same as “Onaiwu” in the Edo language, which is what the Senator and the family as a whole decided to call her. She was a very loyal and devoted spouse, completely supportive of the Midwest national cause, as we shall see later. (Source: The family)

From EZomo N’ehennua to dalhton ogieva asemota
At this point, let us place the birth of Ogieva in the context of his family lineage. Iza, a son of Enogie of Evhurhu relocated from Evhurhu in Evboikhimwin (Esan) to Okhuokhuo (in Isi) during the reign of Oba Ewuakpe. That original lineage is captured and honoured in the family morning salutation – Lagiesan.
Iza begot Ehennua and placed him under the guardianship of the influential Ode in Benin City. Ode was also, coincidentally, a guardian to a man who later became Akenzua I (son of Ewuakpe). It was in this context that Ehennua first became close to the future Oba.

Later on, Ehenua had cause and opportunity to serve Oba Akenzua I druign a perod of adversity, including a fierce power struggle with his younger brother Prince Ozuere. It was on this basis that Akenzua I made Ehennua Ezomo, declared the title hereditary, and promoted him to the ranks of the UZAMA – the King makers – along with a variety of privileges. Having moved to Uzebu, Ehennua later overcame Ovbiozuere, the brother of Akenzual I. and finally Iyase N’Ode, who was at that time an obstacle to Akenzua I’s control of the Kingdom.

Ezomo Ehennua (circa 1713 AD) was followed by a series of hereditary Ezomos, among whom was Ezomo Osifo, son of Erebo, during the tenure of Oba Osemwende. Among his descendants was Osemwota (anglicized Asemota) who was the fifth son f Ogbewe, himself a descendant of Agbonifo, from one of Ezomo Osifo’s lines. Osemwota (Asemota) held the title of Obamagiagbonria under Oba Ovonranwen, and accompanied him during his sojourn to the village outside Benin City following the events of 1896-97. After Oba Ovonranmwen Nogbaisi was deported to Calabar, Osemwota (Asemota) became a trader along the Ikpoba river to koko axis.

Following the interregnum, on July 24, 1914, Eweka II ascended the throne of his forefathers. He took Osemwota as his standard bearer and craftsman for royal regalia. He was inducted into the Iwebo Palace society. In recognition of this service, at the end of 1914, Eweka II conferred the same title that Osemwota’s father Ogbewe had held, that is Obamagiagbonria. Chief Osemwota was later made the Eson in 1930 and died on October 21st 1933, not long after Oba Eweka II himself joined his ancestor.
Early life and education

Dahlton Ogieva Asemota spent his early formative years in Benin City where he quietly witnessed the activities of the British administration during the interregnum.

It is established that he attended the Benin Government (Primary) school, although his exact dates of attendance could not be confirmed as of the time this paper went to press.

The Benin Government (primary) schools were originally established in 1910 and was one of the earlier primary schools established in colonial Nigeria. It was built by the colonial administrators on what used to be part of Palace land opposite the present Oba Market. It was converted to the Midwest state library sometime between 1968 and 1970 by the second post-colonial military government of then Lt. Col (later brigadier) S. O. Ogbemudia. The school pupil were then relocated to the then Benin United Baptist School on Mission road which was later up fitted, acquired and renamed Emokpae primary school. The original Benin Government (primary) school was then demolished in 1974 (by the Ogbemudia regime) with intent to create a permanent site for the Midwest state library.

However, construction was stopped in 1975, without explanation, during the subsequent regime of then Colonel (later Major General) George Innih. During the Innih and subsequent administrations, the original proposed State Library went through multiple renditions with parts of it alternately located, relocated and dislocated in various places, including the former New Nigerian bank building, Eghosa Grammar School, Emokpae Primary School, rental property on forestry road, and the main section which today sits along Sapele road.

A small part of the original colonial facility where the late Senator Dahiton Asemota (OBE) attended primary school was later converted into a police station under the administration of former Governor Lucky lgbinedion, today, a motor park also sits on part of the land.

ADULT LIFE IN THE EMPLOYMENT OF THE UNITED AFRICAN COMPANY (UAC)
For almost thirty (30) years the late Senator Dahlton Asemota was employed by the United African Company where he ruse to become a Manager, served in multiple locations (including Agenebode in present day Edo state and other UAC offices in Northern Nigeria). He became fluent in Hausa, in addition to his native Edo and English.

He attended many in-service professional training opportunities in Nigeria and the United Kingdom, qualified with a Diploma in Accounting, and established a vast network of contacts that would serve him well when, after retirement, he was beckoned to serve in the “Army” of the patriots who fought and eventually won the “Battle for the Midwest region.”

The major part of the late Senator’s adult life is so intertwined with the history of the UAC that a brief summation of the evolution of the United African Company (UAC) in Nigeria captures his professional maturation.

As is well known, the activities of the UAC predated the creation of Nigeria. Indeed, elements of what eventually became the UAC’ can be traced to pre—colonial European traders, all the way back to the Royal Niger Company following a number of complex mergers and acquisitions, eventually, on March 3, 1929, The United Africa Company was formed. It was initially incorporated on April 22, 1931, in Lagos, Nigeria as a wholly—owned subsidiary of Unilever tinder the name Nigerian Motors Ltd. It was at this point that Senator Dahiton Asemota initially began his career with the company.

Nigerian Motors Ltd. later became UAC International, and then subsequently, United Africa Company (Nigeria) Ltd on 23rd July 1 943. But the name changed again to the United Africa Company of Nigeria Ltd on 1st February, 1955. At this point, up until 1960, it began acquiring a substantial portion of the entire business of UAC (International). It was during this period that Senator Dahlton Asemota retired and formed Asemota and Sons, Benin City. Shortly thereafter, his public career began, first as the Chairman, Midwest Advisory Council (1958—1962) which was charged with increasing the participation of Midwesterners in the Western region Action Group government.

Meanwhile, in 1960, C.W.A. Holdings Ltd, England (yet another subsidiary of Unilever), acquired UAC’ (International)’s interest in the company. Among the vast sets of Unilever, were its subsidiaries, The United Africa Company (Timber) Limited, and associated companies, African Timber and Plywood (Nigeria) Limited and African Timber and Plywood (Ghana) Limited.

It was also, in I 960, in accordance with the 1960 constitution, that Dahlton Ogieva Asemeta was appointed Senator representing the Benin province in the Nigerian Western region Federal Upper House by the Action Group. This was a time the Midwest movement was gearing for a final showdown after independence.

Already, by now Chairman, Midwest Advisory Council, Dahlton Ogieva Asemota, had, in retirement, also transitioned into a Director of’ the African Timber and Plywood (Nigeria) Ltd, Sapele, in the Delta province. To appreciate the strategic sensitivity of the company at that time, it should be noted that it had about 2,000 employees at the mill (in Sapele) and another 1,500 working within, about a 300-mile radius around Sapele, felling timber and bringing the logs as much of the way as possible by water. After inspection and classification, appropriate export logs were then loaded into ocean, going ships which typically came up to the three river confluence of the Benin, Jameson, and Ethiope rivers at Sapele. (Eliot Elisofon Field photographs, 1942—1972 Sawmill, at African Timber & Plywood Limited plaint, Sapele, Nigeria, Smithsonian Institution, National Museum of African Art, Eliot Elisofon Photographic Archives)
Historically, since about 1890, enterprising European entrepreneurs had been operating within the Benin Province. The Miller Brothers, earlier noted, which first opened an office in Benin City back in I 900 when Dahlton Ogieva Asemota was born, however, only began their timber enterprise at Koko on the Benin River in 191 7 when he was a teenager

. But it was the formation of the United Africa Company in 1929 (when he had become a young adult) that brought disparate European timber interests under one management, eventually known as the United Africa company (Timber) Limited. His father, Chief Osemwota Ogbewe, the Eson, was already a active trader in that axis ever since the deportation of Oba Ovonranmwen Nogbaisi. There can be doubt that Dahlton benefited from the goodwill and connections of this father Osemwota, who died in 1933.

For its part, United Africa Company had its own network of technical training schools, independent of but complementary to government training centers, university colleges and technical institutes, they conducted training courses in forest operations and management, sawmilling techniques and accountancy. This was the educational system from which Senator Dahlton Asemota and other selected indigenous African managers of his generation graduated. (D H BUCKLE. Timber operations in West Africa.

EXTRA-CURRICULAR CIVIC LIFE
Senator Dahlton Asemota was very well connected in civil society. Among his leadership roles were the Presidency of the Benin Red Cross Society, Beam Imports and Exports Association, and Benin Motor Transport Association all of which served to burnish his reputation as an opinion leader among key constituencies. He was also an avid piano and billiard player, skills and interests than from his man years of business association with Europeans, widening his circle of domestic and international contacts.
RoyAL CONNECTions

By virtue of his birth and lineage Senator Dahlton Asemota was close to the Palace. He was a confidante of Oba Akenzua 11 with whom he often played billiard. He was often at his side when the Oba was leading the open campaign of the Midwest.
N

Article of Faith: Your Money Or Your Life? By Femi Aribisala


Femi Aribisala
“If I lose my money then I lose my life.”
For ten years of married life, my wife and I did not have a child.  We did not have one because we did not want one.  In my case, I was just not ready.  There was no purpose to my life.  I told myself having a child must go beyond the desire to have one.  I was searching for something I did not know and had yet to find.  I felt it was not right to bring a child into my purposelessness.
In the end, we had a child while I was still confused.  But five years later, I finally found meaning for my life.  I met Christ; and he gives meaning to everything.
Counterfeit life
The armed robber offers you a simple choice: “Your money or your life?”  But this turns out to be no choice at all because it is all the same to you.  “If I lose my money then I lose my life.”  Therefore, you adamantly refuse to give him anything.   A bereaved wife laments her husband: “This man was my life.  He was everything to me.  But now he is dead.  I have no more cause for living.”  What seems to be the problem here?  These people had counterfeit lives.  They had lives that could be lost; and faced with the loss, they were devastated.
Jesus cautions that the thief comes to steal, kill and destroy. (John 10:10).  Nevertheless, he does not promise us protection from the thief?  The fact is the life that can be lost will be lost.  The life that can be stolen will be stolen.  The life that can be destroyed will be destroyed.  It all depends on what kind of life we have.  Do we have one that can be lost, stolen or destroyed?
Abundant life
Everyone desires the good life, but what exactly does it entail?  When a man is living the good life, the world expects him to have a powerful and prestigious job; a hefty and sizeable bank account; a few houses in choice locations at home and abroad; some of the finest cars; a beautiful and devoted wife; two or three healthy children.
It is apparent from such expectations that the “good life” is only open to the rich.  But Jesus contradicts this by saying: “one’s life does not consist in the abundance of the things he possesses.” (Luke 12:15).  If so, the life that Jesus promises has been completely misunderstood.  Jesus’ “abundant life” certainly cannot be about the abundance of things, and God-given prosperity cannot be about material wealth.  What then is our life?
The Lord came to me once and asked me a characteristically loaded question.  He said: “Femi, what do you own?”  While I was pondering what exactly he meant and how to go about identifying my possessions, he decided to help me out.  He said to me: “If what you have can be lost, then it does not belong to you.  If it can be stolen, then it has no value.  If it can be burnt or destroyed then it is illusory.”
Then he asked me further: “So what do you have left?”  I did not know what to say but the Holy Spirit helped me out.  He said: “Femi, the only ‘thing’ you have left is Jesus.”
Abundant life
Jesus said: “I am come that they might have life.” (John 10:10).  But, were people not alive before he came?  No, says the word of God.  We were dead.  We were dead in trespasses and sins.  Life has nothing to do with being alive.  Jesus revealed that the dead are walking.  They are walking according to the ways of the devil.  In effect, Jesus came as the light of the world to reveal to man who was sitting in darkness that although he was alive, he was dead.  And he now says that we should receive the true bread of life from him.
But then what kind of life did Jesus himself live?  Surely, the giver of “abundant life” must have enjoyed it himself?  If so, how did he enjoy it?  Once we ask this question, the contradictions to popular thinking become apparent.  Jesus did not have many of those things we normally attribute with the good life.
He was born in a manger.  He had no formal schooling or education.  He had neither chariots nor horses.  He did not have a wife or any children.  When someone volunteered to be his disciple, Jesus warned him they would not be staying at the Sheraton Hotel. He said: “Foxes have holes and birds of the air have nests, but the Son of Man has nowhere to lay His head.” (Matthew 8:20).
How then is a man to enjoy life?  Only by enjoying the life Jesus came to give.  That life is not the life of the body.  That life is the spiritual life. It was the spiritual life that was missing; the physical life existed before Christ came.  Before Christ, man was spiritually dead to God.  Because Christ came to show us the way to return, we can now be spiritually alive to God.  Thanks to Jesus, God says: “This son of mine was dead and is alive again; he was lost and is found.” (Luke 15:24).
Jesus; our life
I am reminded of a possibly apocryphal story a woman trader from Kano told me about a former President of Nigeria who was affectionately called “Maradona.”  She said after he became President, he called his best friend and asked him what he could do for him.  “I am President now,” he said.  “Ask me for whatever you desire.”  The friend gratefully declined on the grounds that he was alright.  God had been good to him, he said, he had no pressing needs.
When he left, the President called his lieutenants.  “Find out what that man is relying on,” he demanded.  They came back and gave him details of his friend’s business interests.  So the President gave a simple instruction: “Block everything.  Make life as difficult for him as possible in every area of his interest.”  And his lieutenants set out to the task.
Soon the friend came back to see the President.  “See me see trouble,” he cried.  “I am having this problem and having that difficulty.”  The President was most sympathetic.  “What am I here for?” he asked expansively.  “Did I not tell you if you have any problem all you have to do is tell me?”  So after listening to his friend go over the details of his predicament, he promised to take immediate action.  Thereafter, he instructed his lieutenants again concerning his friend.  “Unblock everything you blocked.”
You may well ask what the motive of the President was in these machinations.  He was not satisfied with being the man’s friend.  He wanted to be his life.
After hearing this story, I decided to add to it.  What if when the President asked his people to find out what his friend was relying on, they came back and told him: “Sir, he is relying on Jesus.”  What do you think the President could do in such a situation?  Can he still tell them: “Block everything?”  Certainly not!  The man’s life would have been impregnable.
Vanguard

A KILLER IN YOUR FRIDGE SWEET POISON..A MUST READ !!!


In October of 2001, my sister started getting very sick She had stomach spasms and she was having a hard time getting around. Walking was a major chore. It took everything she had just to get out of bed; she was in so much pain.

By March 2002, she had undergone several tissue and muscle biopsies and was on 24 various prescription medications. The doctors could not determine what was wrong with her. She was in so much pain, and so sick she just knew she was dying.

She put her house, bank accounts, life insurance, etc., in her oldest daughter's name, and made sure that her younger children were to be taken care of.

She also wanted her last hooray, so she planned a trip to Florida (basically in a wheelchair) for March 22nd.

On March 19, I called her to ask how her most recent tests went, and she said they didn't find anything on the test, but they believe she had MS.

I recalled an article a friend of mine e-mailed to me and I asked my sister if she drank diet soda? She told me that she did. As a matter of fact, she was getting ready to crack one open that moment.

I told her not to open it, and to stop drinking the diet soda! I e-mailed her an article my friend, a lawyer, had sent. My sister called me within 32 hours after our phone conversation and told me she had stopped drinking the diet soda AND she could walk! The muscle spasms went away. She said she didn't feel 100% but, she sure felt a lot better.

She told me she was going to her doctor with this article and would call me when she got home.

Well, she called me, and said her doctor was amazed! He is going to call all of his MS patients to find out if they consumed artificial sweeteners of any kind. In a nutshell, she was being poisoned by the Aspartame in the diet soda.. and literally dying a slow and miserable death

When she got to Florida March 22, all she had to take was one pill, and that was a pill for the Aspartame poisoning! She is well on her way to a complete recovery. And she is walking! No wheelchair! This article saved her life.If it says 'SUGAR FREE' on the label; DO NOT EVEN THINK ABOUT IT!I have spent several days lecturing at the WORLD ENVIRONMENTAL CONFERENCE on 'ASPARTAME,' marketed as'Nutra Sweet,' 'Equal,' and 'Spoonful.'In the keynote address by the EPA, it was announced that in the United States in 2001 there is an epidemic of multiple sclerosis and systemic lupus. It was difficult to determine exactly what toxin was causing this to be rampant. I stood up and said that I was there to lecture on exactly that subject.

I will explain why Aspartame is so dangerous: When the temperature of this sweetener exceeds 86 degrees F, the wood alcohol in ASPARTAME converts to formaldehyde and then to formic acid, which in turn causes metabolic acidosis. Formic acid is the poison found in the sting of fire ants. The methanol toxicity mimics, among other conditions, multiple sclerosis and systemic lupus.

Many people were being diagnosed in error. Although multiple sclerosis is not a death sentence, Methanol toxicity is!

Systemic lupus has become almost as rampant as multiple sclerosis, especially with Diet Coke and Diet Pepsi drinkers.The victim usually does not know that the Aspartame is the culprit. He or she continues its use; irritating the lupus to such a degree that it may become a life-threatening condition. We have seen patients with systemic lupus become asymptotic, once taken off diet sodas.

In cases of those diagnosed with Multiple Sclerosis, most of the symptoms disappear. We've seen many cases where vision loss returned and hearing loss improved markedly.

This also applies to cases of tinnitus and fibromyalgia. During a lecture, I said, 'If you are using ASPARTAME (Nutra Sweet, Equal, Spoonful, etc) and you suffer from fibromyalgia symptoms, spasms, shooting, pains, numbness in your legs,
Cramps,
Vertigo,
Dizziness,
Headaches,
Tinnitus,
Joint pain,
Unexplainable depression, anxiety attacks, slurred speech, blurred vision, or memory loss you probably have ASPARTAME poisoning!' People were jumping up during the lecture saying,'I have some of these symptoms. Is it reversible?'

Yes!
Yes!
Yes!
STOP drinking diet sodas and be alert for Aspartame on food labels! Many products are fortified with it! This is a serious problem. Dr. Espart (one of my speakers) remarked that so many people seem to be symptomatic for MS and during his recent visit to a hospice; a nurse stated that six of her friends, who were heavy Diet Coke addicts, had all been diagnosed with MS. This is beyond coincidence!

Diet soda is NOT a diet product! It is a chemically altered, multiple SODIUM (salt) and ASPARTAME containing product that actually makes you crave carbohydrates.

It is far more likely to make you GAIN weight!

These products also contain formaldehyde, which stores in the fat cells, particularly in the hips and thighs. Formaldehyde is an absolute toxin and is used primarily to preserve 'tissue specimens.'

Many products we use every day contain this chemical but we SHOULD NOT store it IN our body!

Dr. H. J. Roberts stated in his lectures that once free of the 'diet products' and with no significant increase in exercise; his patients lost an average of 19 pounds over a trial period.Aspartame is especially dangerous for diabetics. We found that some physicians, who believed that they had a patient with retinopathy, in fact, had symptoms caused by Aspartame. The Aspartame drives the blood sugar out of control. Thus diabetics may suffer acute memory loss due to the fact that aspartic acid and phenylalanine are NEUROTOXIC when taken without the other amino acids necessary for a good balance.

Treating diabetes is all about BALANCE.. Especially with diabetics, the Aspartame passes the blood/brain barrier and it then deteriorates the neurons of the brain; causing various levels of brain damage, Seizures, Depression, Manic depression, Panic attacks, Uncontrollable anger and rage.Consumption of Aspartame causes these same symptoms in non-diabetics as well. Documentation and observation also reveal that thousands of children diagnosed with ADD and ADHD have had complete turnarounds in their behavior when these chemicals have been removed from their diet.

So called 'behavior modification prescription drugs' (Ritalin and others) are no longer needed.Truth be told, they were never NEEDED in the first place!Most of these children were being 'poisoned' on a daily basis with the very foods that were 'better for them than sugar.'It is also suspected that the Aspartame in thousands of pallets of diet Coke and diet Pepsi consumed by men and women fighting in the Gulf War, may be partially to blame for the well-known Gulf War Syndrome.

Dr. Roberts warns that it can cause birth defects, i.e. mental retardation, if taken at the time of conception and during early pregnancy. Children are especially at risk for neurological disorders and should NEVER be given artificial sweeteners.

There are many different case histories to relate of children suffering grand mal seizures and other neurological disturbances talking about a plague of neurological diseases directly caused by the use of this deadly poison.'

Herein lies the problem: There were Congressional Hearings when Aspartame was included in 100 different products and strong objection was made concerning its use. Since this initial hearing, there have been two subsequent hearings, and still nothing has been done. The drug and chemical lobbies have very deep pockets.

Sadly, MONSANTO'S patent on Aspartame has EXPIRED! There are now over 5,000 products on the market that contain this deadly chemical and there will be thousands more introduced. Everybody wants a 'piece of the Aspartame pie.'I assure you that MONSANTO, the creator of Aspartame, knows how deadly it is.

And isn't it ironic that MONSANTO funds, among others, the American Diabetes Association, the American Dietetic Association and the Conference of the American College of Physicians?

This has been recently exposed in the New York Times. These [organizations] cannot criticize any additives or convey their link to MONSANTO because they take money from the food industry and are required to endorse their products.Senator Howard Metzenbaum wrote and presented a bill that would require label warnings on products containing Aspartame, especially regarding pregnant women, children and infants.

The bill would also institute independent studies on the known dangers and the problems existing in the general population regarding seizures, changes in brain chemistry, neurological changes and behavioural symptoms.
The bill was killed.It is known that the powerful drug and chemical lobbies are responsible for this, letting loose the hounds of disease and death on an unsuspecting and uninformed public. Well, you're informed now!

NGF Crisis: ‘PDP Is An Organisation Of Rogues’; I’m vindicated –Oshiomhole

Edo State government has stated that the controversy surrounding the outcome of the Nigeria Governors’ Forum (NGF) has vindicated Governor Adams Oshiomhole that the Peoples Democratic party is an organisation of rogues.

adam oshiomoleIt also stated that Rivers State governor, Mr. Chibuike Amaechi, never donated N500 million to the campaign funds of Governor Oshiomhole, as reported by our sister publication.
On the alleged donation by Amaechi, Prince Kassim Afegbua, special adviser, media and publicity to Governor Oshiomhole, said, in a statement, that all those who made donations to the Edo governor’s campaign were listed and in its report.
He stated that the allegation was an orchestrated attempt to give Amaechi a bad name, adding that Oshiomhole knows the provision of the Electoral Act (as amended) and could not have received such donation.
The governor’s aide also stated that there was no time Amaechi spent two nights in Edo State, as stated in the report.
While saying that Amaechi was duly re-elected as chairman of the Nigeria Governors’ Forum, the statement said the action of some PDP governors, especially those who said they have another NGF chairman, shows the character of the party.
The statement said: “The attention of the Edo State Governor, Comrade Adams Aliyu Oshiomhole, has been drawn to a news report published in Daily Sun of Thursday, 30th May, 2013 page 3, indicating that Amaechi’s travails might not be unconnected to his alleged donation of N500m for the second term campaigns of the duly elected Edo State Governor, Comrade Adams Aliyu Oshiomhole.
“To state the fact, there was no time that the Rivers State Governor, Rt. Hon. Chibuike Rotimi Amaechi, donated any money, let alone the sum of N500m, either directly or by proxy, to the campaign funds of the Comrade Governor, Adams Aliyu Oshiomhole. Again, we wish to state unequivocally that there was no time that the Rivers State governor spent two nights in Benin City before, during and after the campaigns of the comrade governor.
“The Oshiomhole Campaign Organisation was very conscious of the requirement of the law, with respect to donation, reason it embarked on public fund raising dinners in Lagos, Abuja and Benin City. All those who made donations to the second term campaign of the performing Governor Oshiomhole were well captured in our reports and duly appreciated. There was nowhere that the Rivers State governor was captured as having donated, let alone such a whopping sum of N500m.
“But for a country and a democracy such as ours, there should be no crime for any governor to honour the invitation of the comrade governor on his second term inauguration, especially that of the duly elected chairman of the Governors’ Forum. The beauty of democracy and credible elections is the exhibition of the spirit of sportsmanship by the loser and his party, and not this invidious show of hostility by the opposition PDP.”
When the comrade governor earlier referred to the PDP as a party of rogues, the party went for his jugular by calling him unprintable names and churning out all manner of lies and concocted tales just to make an impression. With the recent outcome of the Nigeria Governors’ Forum election, which returned Governor Amaechi as duly elected, and following the u-turn of those who participated in the exercise, the comrade governor’s roguish description of the PDP has become instructively appropriate.