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Monday, 12 January 2015

Fire rages at Balogun Market


Property worth millions of naira have been consumed by fire
at the Balogun market on Lagos Island.
The National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) said the
fire started at about 4.36am from an unknown source and has
been raging despite efforts by the Fire service to put it under
control.
NEMA spokesman Ibrahim Fariloye said in a text message
that efforts to put the fire under control is still on-going. He
was silent on casualties.
Details soon

2 female bombers kill 8 in Potiskum


Twin explosions carried out by two female Boko Haram
bombers yesterday killed at least eight people while 46 were
injured in Potiskum, Yobe State. Hospital sources said five
bodies were deposited and 46 injured persons admitted after
the terrorists who rode in a tricycle, detonated explosive
devices in a GSM market.
Witnesses said the two ladies rode into the GSM market at
about 3.30pm yesterday with nobody suspecting anything.
“Some of us saw them, but never thought they were
bombers”, one of the eyewitnesses, who did not want her
name in print, told Daily Sun on phone.
She said one of the ladies alighted from the tricycle and went
into the market while her accomplice remained in the tricycle.
“I was in the market with my sister to repair my phone. It was
not more than five minutes later that we heard the explosions.
Before we could leave, another sound from the second lady in
the tricycle came,” she said.
Apart from the two suicide bombers and the tricycle rider that
died, the blasts also killed five others, a security source said.
The attack came barely a day after another blast killed two
policemen. The police in Potiskum were said to have
impounded a car laden with bomb on Saturday afternoon and
took the car to their station with the suspect.
However, the situation went awry as the car exploded hours
later, killing two policemen in the station while some were
injured. A source who declined to be mentioned, said the
suspect who drove the explosive-laden car eventually escaped
in the ensuing confusion after the blast.

It’s true MEND wanted Jonathan dead – Asari-Dokubo


Leader of the Niger Delta Peoples Volunteers Force(NDPVF),
Alhaji Mujahid Asari-Dokubo, formerly known as Melford
Dokubo Goodhead Jr., has earned a reputation as a man who
has, arguably, made some controversial pronouncements over
the 2015 general elections.
In this interview, he spoke on the claim by President Goodluck
Jonathan that Mr. Henry Okah attempted to kill him, his al­
leged threat to overrun Yoruba and other issues.Excerpts:
W hat is your reaction to the recent endorsement of Gen.
Muhammadu Buhari by MEND?
Our people say that birds of the same feather flock together.
It is not strange that this phantom organisation is endorsing
Gen. Muhammadu Buhari. I have always maintained that there
is nothing like MEND. Anybody who has been reading my
write-ups and interviews know my position on this. Let me
make some explanation, regarding the coming into being of
MEND.
When I was in the prison, NDPVF, the the political arm of
organisation I belong to, went to Okerenkuku on the invitation
of Tompolo. The IYC also went. Tompolo’s organisation was
there too. Other organisations were equally there. They went
to Okerenkuku for a meeting on how to come together for our
struggle. They decided that they did not want any more arrest.
They resolved to use a faceless organisation. Denis Otuaro
came with Kingston Poto and later Henry Okah came to me at
Kuje prison.
They came to get my opinion on the need to get a name that
would be used. Although members of the NDPVF resisted the
new alignment, I coerced them into joining them. Okah and
others wanted us to be faceless. They decided that fighters
would bear phantom names. So, they came up with names,
like Gen. Godswill, Tamino, Gbomo Jomo, Alaibe, etc. These
were phantom names. They were not real. That was how the
organisation, MEND, was formed. Before I came out of prison,
there was a break when Henry Okah became more domi­
neering. He was extorting money from oil companies. Almost
all the governors in the Niger Delta were paying him millions.
A former of Rivers State governor was paying him N100
million monthly.
Some groups started breaking out when they could no longer
bear what was happening. There was a group that came out.
The name was Nabina. It was the authentic MEND that
started issuing statement. Anytime there was an attack,
authentic MEND would come out with the nature of the attack,
where it took place. It would do that before the other MEND
would react. They started attacking each other. Nabina was
linked to me. It was formed by members of the NDPVF, who
felt that they were doing the job but another group was taking
the glory. They were the people who went to Brass, Cutting
Channel, etc. So, why would another group be taking the
glory? That issue dragged until I came out from the prison.
At what point did President Jonathan come into the picture?
When I met with the then Vice President, now President
Goodluck Jonathan, he asked me all that was happening. I
decided that NDPVF should stop all forms of arms struggle.
That was how we disbanded arms struggle. That does not
mean that we never had clashes with these groups. The Henry
Okah group started to mop up people. Kidnapping became a
vehicle for making money.
Ijaw struggle is a spiritual one. A lot of people do not know
this. The struggle was based on Egbesu.
When you are an adherent of Egbesu, you do not steal. If you
pick a toothpick that is not yours, you will die; if you rape a
woman, you will die; If you shoot a person who is not armed,
someone who is not fighting, you will die. Also, if you cut
down economic tree or destroy a fishpond you will die and if
you burn down a house, you will die. These are laws of
Egbesu. Those who believe in Egbesu don’t do these things I
mentioned. All the songs we sang then were Egbesu songs.
Only a few of us – Labikeremana and I – who were a born
again Christian and a Muslim that were a bit different. Even at
that, we could not say that we were totally immune from
Egbesu’s influence .
When Henry Okah first came to the Niger Delta, he didn’t
know anything about Ijaw because he is a Yoruba Ijaw. He
was misbehaving when he came. I have always called him a
Yoruba man. He came through me to be known to everybody
in Ijaw and Niger Delta generally. How his disagreement with
Goodluck Jonathan started was that he wanted Jonathan to
pay him money. I wrote a piece on this titled: ‘When silence is
not golden’ in 2007, I revealed a lot in the piece, which I
tagged part one.Ijaw elders begged me not to reveal more in
my proposed part two of the write up. The part two was ready
but I didn’t publish it because Clarke and others begged me
not to. They said that I was revealing the secret of Ijaw. I told
them that what they were doing would backfire. Everybody
was on my head. I became their enemy.
If Henry Okah asked for money and you didn’t give him, they
would come after you. When Jonathan was governor of
Bayelsa, the Okah group asked him to share the budget of the
state and give five per cent. They wanted five per cent of the
state’s earning every month to service the ‘boys.’ But
Jonathan said no. Because Jonathan refused, the Okah group
invaded Government House. Some of the people who are now
claiming to support Jonathan were part of the people that
invaded Government House, Bayelsa. They destroyed some
important things. My people ran away with Jonathan as
governor. They went to Otueke, thinking he was there and
burnt down his country home. The governor ran. Some of
them are today the people around Jonathan.
You seem to habour personal grudges against Okah? I am the
only person who has been talking against Henry Okah. He is
nobody. He does not have the power they think he has. If he
challenges me, we will meet. We will throw Ijaw into an orgy
of violence. Back to the issue, the Henry Okah group continued
with his strategy when Yar’Adua came to power. He continued
arm-twisting him. He demanded for an oil bloc and Yar’Adua
agreed to give him and his boys the oil bloc. But that could
not be done until he died . Henry was still in prison while the
discussion was going on. When Goodluck Jonathan took over,
he reneged on that agreement. But Jonathan released him
from prison on account of the amnesty programme. I had told
the world that Henry was involved in a coup plot in Equatorial
Guinea but it was denied. Later it was discovered to be true
and he was arrested, detained and tried. But President
Yar’Adua caused him to be released because some Ijaw
people who today have ruined President Goodluck Jonathan’s
government, impressed on the late president to help release
him. Some Ijaw people, I must tell you, have ruined
Jonathan’s government. They see danger but they tell him to
go to the danger.
Back to the issue, Okah, after he was released, struck a deal
with Yar’Adua to take amnesty. All the militants, except me
took amnesty. Because I did not take the amnesty, Yar’Adua
chased me out of the country and I went into exile. Between
2009 and 2010, I was in exile. When Goodluck became
president, I was called and asked why I was still outside the
country. I told them that I had no business coming back. But
everybody came to Benin Republic to plead with me to return.
In Benin, I was visiting Libya, Niger and Holland frequently.
When I returned to Nigeria, one of my assistants, who is my
cousin, one day called me and said, when one Chima was
coming back, give him some money for me. I called Chima and
he said he was coming to meet me the next day.
I am saying all these because people are asking why didn’t
Goodluck say it. Some Ijaw people want him to make
mistakes. When the call came, I decided to call back. I quickly
remembered that when I was in prison, Chima used to work
with Henry Okah. I told myself that something was wrong
somewhere. One Orji, Chima’s friend, who was also close to
me, called me and said they were in Abuja. He said that
Chima would call me later. Anytime they called, after the
conversation they would switch off their phones. I would call
them, but their phones would be dead.
Immediately, I alerted the office of NSA that something was
going to happen. That was two days to October 1. I told them
that there were people in town and something was going to
happen. One of our commanders told me that Chima called
him and showed him some weapons, night vision goggles,
explosives, etc. and that they wanted to renew the attack in
the Niger Delta. He took the picture of the weapons. I went
home, collected the picture and took it to the JTF
commander. He printed the picture. He later sent the picture
to Abuja. On Thursday, they went to search the home of Henry
Okah in South Africa. One of the closest persons to Goodluck
came to my hotel room in Bolingo and asked when I would
end the hatred against Henry Okah. He asked if it was
because he was more popular than I. I told him that we were
not in popularity contest. This was happening on Thursday.
On Friday, the bomb went off. Instead of helping to arrest
Henry Okah, when he was here, they were calling him on
phone to advise him that MEND should not claim
responsibility for the bomb blast. Some of the things I am
telling you were on my Facebook wall. I was the first person,
after the October 1, 2010 blast, to come out to say that Henry
Okah was responsible for the bomb explosion. Many people
attacked me. The former president of IYC came out and
abused me. They were all thinking that Ijaw must be united. It
has dawned on all of them now that Henry Okah was the
greatest danger to our struggle.
The reason I cannot be charged by the Nigerian state is that
there is no evidence that I did oil bunkering, kidnapping or
other evils. All my charges are political. As far as our struggle
was concerned, we saw it as a moral one. We believe that
morality must come first before any other thing. We are
finished if we lose the support of God. It is the support of God
that emboldened us to fight. It is what gives us the impetus,
the drive to say that if you shoot us, we will not die. For me,
what the president said is belated. He had known since 2007
that the Henry Okah group wanted to kill him. For not saying
it out since, it is the fault of Ijaw leaders, including Clarke,
who had been saying they should hide those thing and sweep
it under the carpet. They forgot that one day, the debris under
the carpet would become too much that the carpet would be
undulated. The stench is coming out now and the president
can no longer hold back; he has now come out to say that
Henry Okah wanted to assassinate him. What he said was
true. Henry Okah wanted him dead.
Were Ijaw leaders the people that asked the President to
exonerate MEND when the blast took place? The argument
that the president gave was in order. When you talk about
MEND, Tompolo, Boy Loaf, Africa, Ogunbos and Varadagogo
were all MEND leaders. They were field commanders but they
were not among those that carried out the bomb blast. It is
like IRA, a branch of the organisation goes to carry out a
bomb blast and the mainstream IRA says no, we are not part
of it . Ninety nine per cent of the so-called conglomerate of
MEND was not there. They had taken amnesty and they were
with Mr. President. So, the president was right in saying that
MEND was not involved. If Mr. President had exonerated all
the MEND elements, Henry Okah would not have been
arrested. The president was making a distinction between
Henry Okah and the mainstream MEND, which was led by
Tompolo and which is still with Mr. President.
He was not wrong. Let me give you another analogy. It is like
some APC members attacking somebody. They didn’t have the
authority and backing of the authorities of APC before carrying
out the attack. The party will not take responsibility. The party
would be right to say that the attack was not carried out by
it; that those people who did the attack are members of APC
does equate to APC being responsible for the attack .
Is it safe to say that security agents at a point deceived the
president by going after Chief Raymond Dokpesi? That is not
true. A lot of things happened that Nigerians do not know. If
we go into it, we will spill a lot of beans. Ebiwari, who is in
prison now, was working with Dokpesi. My driver, who is late,
was also working with Dokpesi and co. Henry Okah was with
them. When they were caught, they saw messages in their
handsets sent to Dokpesi, Henry Okah and other people. For
everybody that was investigated, there were telephone calls
that linked them together. The security tried to arrest every­
body that was connected in the calls and text messages, etc.
When I was in the prison, kidnapping was going on. Dokpesi
came to me when the first set of kidnapping was done. The
police brought phone to me at Area 10. Dokpesi spoke to me
through my sister, Hilda Dokubo. He asked me how I could
facilitate and talk to these boys to release the people
kidnapped. He said that it was giving a bad image to the
government.
The Henry Okah people were anti-Goodluck. They didn’t want
Goodluck to win the 2011 election; the same thing they are
doing now endorsing Buhari. They issued the same statement
in 2011 that nobody should vote for Goodluck.
You said that some Niger Delta leaders are deceiving
Jonathan. Is Clarke among the people?
No, I didn’t say that Clarke was among those deceiving the
president . What Clarke and few Ijaw leaders wanted was
genuine. They wanted unity among Ijaw fighters, among Niger
Delta people. They did not want disunity. They saw me as
somebody who was not ready to abide by this. They felt that I
was not ready to hide a few people who were doing some
wrongs. They wanted me to keep quite, even when some
things were not right but I cannot do that. By the way I was
brought up I cannot keep quiet in the face of evil. Most of the
people I am working with are from poor background. I have
never known poverty. I have always had whatever I wanted.
People want to be rich but wealth means nothing to me, it
does not entice me. I was chauffeur-driven to school, except
when I was in the village with my grandmother. My other
siblings never experienced village life; that is why I am
different from them. I went to live in the village because my
father wanted me to learn the culture and language of my
people. Most of siblings cannot speak our dialect very well.
Clarke and others saw me as being arrogant.
You are considered as one of the few Nigerians making
inflammatory utterances ahead of the February election. How
do you feel being associated with this toga?
I have never made a statement without reacting to somebody.
I am not a mad man. I see somebody with a gun on televi­
sion, standing and saying: ‘We are going to kill you, Niger
Delta; Niger Delta, we are coming’ and you expect me to fold
my hands and watch him? No, I can’t do that. That is how
the people in Gwoza waited: where are they today? The
people in Mubi waited; where are they today? The people in
Baga waited; where are they today? I will not wait. Let Ango
Abdullahi and Buhari call their boys to order. If they shoot us,
we will shoot them back. There are no two ways about it. You
cannot tell me that I should fold my hands and get killed.
You see a man with armoured vehicle, anti aircraft and you
tell me to fold my hands. I will not do so. I will also buy mine.
I will also prepare. Before the man would shoot at me, I will
shoot him. It is my right to life. Who is Ango Abdullahi? If not
that he is from the North, would he have been a professor in
the first place? What is his academic contribution? He makes
careless and provocative statements and expects us to keep
quiet. I will not do that. There is this thing that everybody has
been doing – leave them, please, you are not like them, don’t
go and compare your life with them, they will kill you, etc.
That is nonsense. Don’t they have fleas and blood? If I shoot
them, will they not die? Why should I leave them? They will
look at me and say they are born to rule. I will punch anybody
that says that.
You were quoted as having threatened to overrun Yorubaland
if the people fail to vote for Jonathan next month. How true
is the claim?
I never made such statement; it is a lie. Everybody knows that
whenever I make a statement, I own up to it. There is no such
thing. Many times, a lot of things are ascribed to me. For
instance, they claimed I said ‘this Fulani man.’ I don’t use the
world Fulani. What I use is Gambari for Fulani people. They
claimed I said ‘this Fulani man, Buhari’ will do better for Niger
Delta people than President Jonathan. How can I say such
thing? When he was head of state, let him show what he did
for the Niger Delta. He was in the PTF, let him show what he
did for the Niger Delta. What they do is that, because they feel
that I am very vocal for the election, they ascribe all manner
of things to me. They know that they have lost Yorubaland;
how can they win in Yoruba? There is nothing they can do to
win in Yorubaland. They lost the election in Ekiti. In Osun,
where they have the power, they scored 52/48. They know
they have lost election in Yorubaland. They want to inflame
tempers; they came up with the claim that Jonathan’s brother
said he would overrun Yorubaland. They have failed; they
have access to the press and I have too. I never said such
thing.

PDP accuses APC supporters of burning Jonathan’scampaign vehicles


Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) Presidential Campaign
Organisation has alleged that supporters of the All
Progressives Congress (APC) were behind weekend burning of
President Goodluck Jonathan’s campaign buses at Zololo
Junction along Bauchi Road in Jos North North Local Govern­
ment Area of Plateau State.
According to reports, two buses belonging to Goodluck
Jonathan’s campaign were torched by youths in Jos who
asked the occupants to disembark from the vehicles before
setting them on fire.
But Director of Media and Publicity of the President Goodluck
Jonathan’s Campaign Organization, Chief Femi Fani-Kayode,
in a statement yesterday alleged that the APC supporters
were responsible and called on the APC presidential candidate,
General Muhammadu Buhari, to call them to order and ensure
a violence-free election.
Reacting, Buhari in a statement last night by his Director on
Media and Publicity, Mallam Garba Shehu, dismissed the
allegation of the PDP that his supporters were responsible for
burning of two buses belonging to Jonathan campaign
organisation in Jos, Plateau State at the weekend.
The APC presidential candidate said disenchanted PDP
chieftains who lost out in the recently rigged primaries of the
ruling party were responsible.
The former aviation minister said: “It is on record that General
Buhari’s utterances since 2011 have fueled violence especially
the post-election violence in parts of the North which claimed
the lives of many corps members who were deployed as ad-
hoc staff members for that year’s election.
“It is sad that up till now, General Buhari has refused to
apologize to the Nigerian people for that barbaric and
shameful incident or show any remorse for the actions of his
supporters. He could not even bring himself to tender an
apology to the families of those young corps members that
were hacked to death and murdered in cold blood by his
agents,” he said.

5 injured as fire guts tanker, petrol station in Ondo


No fewer than five persons were on Saturday evening, injured
in a fire outbreak at a filling station in Okitipupa, headquarters
of Okitipupa Local Government Area of Ondo State.
The incident, which occurred at 8.00pm, Daily Sun gathered,
was caused by a tanker that caught fire shortly after off
loading Premium Motor Spirit (PMS) otherwise known as
petrol. The filling station located at the Roundabout area of
the town, and three residential buildings located close to it,
were razed.
The driver of the tanker, simply identified as Solomon, was
reportedly burnt beyond recognition.
Sources alleged that officials of the State Fire Service failed to
respond to distress calls put to them by residents of the area.
It was gathered that officials of the State Fire Service
complained of lack of vehicles and water when they were
approached.
Meanwhile, the victims of the inferno were said to be receiving
treatment at an undisclosed hospital in the town.
Efforts to reach the state Police Public Relations Officer
(PPRO), Mr. Wole Ogodo for comments failed.
Similar fire incident last month claimed lives and destroyed
valuables at Arakale Gas Company in Akure.

Day Jonathan’s campaign electrified Lagos


Lagos residents and political watchers cannot forget in a
hurry, Thursday, January 8. It was the day President Goodluck
Jonathan stormed the country’s commercial nerve with his
campaign train to showcase his achievement in office and to
solicit votes for a second term in office.
Altough the event was slated for 11a.m. that sunny Thursday,
the Tafawa Balewa Square (TBS), venue of the campaign
started receiving party faithful, supporters and well wishers as
early as 6a.m. And before 10a.m., the venue was almost filled
to the brim.
And when the dignitaries started thronging the venue, it would
be an understatement to say it was a full house. The Director-
General of the National Campaign Committee, Dr. Amodu Ali,
his South-West counterpart, Governor Olusegun Mimiko as
well as the National Chairman of the Peoples Democratic
Party (PDP), Alhaji Adamu Mu’azu were also on ground to
receive another party wigs that included President Goodluck
Jonathan, who is the party’s presidential flagbearer for the
February 14 election as well as his running mate, Vice
President Namadi Sambo.
Others in attendance were all PDP Governors, both sitting and
former, all the governorship candidates on the party’s tickets,
serving ministers, National Assembly members, party’s Board
of Trustee members and party, student groups, Nollywood
actors and actresses and various political associations among
others.
While welcoming the guests to the occasion, Also, the South
West coordinator of the Jonathan campaign and Ondo State
governor Olusegun Mimiko said the South West was an
educated region. He noted that, “This is why, among others,
we will not settle for a President with less than a University
degree.” Mimiko described President Jonathan as a cool
headed leader who in spite of all the insults hurled at him has
remained calm. “We thank you Mr. President that, in spite of
being the most abused and negatively-profiled President in the
history of this country, you have refused to roll out any
obnoxious law of the semblance of Decree 2 of 1984,” Mimiko
concluded.
In his own goodwill message, the Chairman of the PDP
governor and Akwa Ibom state governor, Godswill Akpabio
said contrary to the allegation by the opposition that $55 bil­
lion was missing from the federation account, no money is
missing. He explained that the money was shared among the
three tiers of government. He noted that there was sense
keeping the money when a lot of people are suffering, hence
the governors advised that the money should be shared to
enable them ameliorate the suffering of the people. Akpabio
said governors elected on the PDP platform, who were not at
the campaign were those who wanted Jonathan’s seat and
when they could not get it, they left for the Aggrieved Peoples
Congress (APC). “Nigeria cannot afford to hand over
leadership to aggrieved people. People who are embittered.
They are set to send people to prison again. Are you ready to
go to prison? Some of your fathers were given 310 years for
crime they did not commit. Can a leopard change its skin?
They are threatening that if we win, they will form a parallel
government. Get ready to defend your votes. “The people
following Jonathan are more than those opposing him. To hell
with their parallel government,” Akpabio declared. The Niger
State governor, Dr Babangida Aliyu said the PDP abhors
violence. He said some people were already planning to
forment trouble in next month’s election and admonished the
party members not to succumb. Aliyu also advised PDP
members not to succumb to the propaganda of the
opposition, as there is a difference between sentiment and
reality.
In his goodwill speech, the Senate President, Senator David
Mark also said the choice between Jonathan and the
opposition candidate was simple, saying, “it is just between
Day and night.”
He expressed confidence that people would vote for the man,
whose four years transformation agenda has impacted
positively on the people.
Former National Deputy Chairman (South), of the party, Chief
Bode George said “today would be remembered as the
beginning of the journey that would see the APC pack its bag
and baggage out of Alausa Government House.”
According to him, the people of Lagos has not enjoyed good
governance in the last 16 years in the state, saying, “though
there is no perfect organization anywhere in the world, the
PDP however handles governance well and that makes the
party and its government formidable.”
Speaking on behalf of the South-West PDP governors,
Governor Ayodele Fayose of Ekiti State said the south-west
people were eager for change asserting that, PDP is that
change they were waiting for.
He then urged the zone’s people to vote President Jonathan
again for the continuity of his good work.
Director General of the Campaign Organization, Dr. Amadu Ali
in his own comment said PDP has shown that there is no
alternative to democracy pointing out that, since 1999, the
party has moved the country forward.
He expressed delight that the party has succeded in deepening
democracy in the country reminding that, “under our adminis­
tration, Nigeria has transited for times without disturbance.”
He therefore urged Nigerians to keep on supporting the party
by voting President Jonathan again.
Federal Capital Territory Minister of State, Oloye Junmoke
Akinjide drew a line between Jonathan and Buhari pointing out
that while Jonathan is a democrat, Buhari is a dictator, while
Jonathan was elected through the ballot boxes, Buhari came
to power through the barrel of the gun.
She also added that while Buhari chased people out of the
country and jailed some for more than 300 years, Jonathan
has not hurled a single person to prison inspite of undeserved
insults being hurled at him.
Joseph Yobo, an international Soccer Ambassador also spoke
on behalf of the youth.
President Goodluck Jonathan, who was ushered to the podium
amid ovation however stunned his audience when he declared
that the members of the Movement for Emancipation of Niger
Delta (MEND), hatched a plan to kill him.
According to him, when he read in some national dailies that,
“MEND dumped Jonathan,” he reminded the party chieftains
and supporters that thronged the venue in their thousands
that, the leader of the group, Henry Okar, who is currently
serving a jail term in South Africa planned to assassinate him.
Against this backdrop, Jonathan reasoned that, the group’s
acclaimed withdraw of support for him was never expected to
come as a surprise to anybody who has been following events
in the country. On the claim by the opposition All Progressive
Congress (APC), presidential candidate, General Muhammadu
Buhari (retd), that the President cannot fight the insurgents,
President Jonathan fired a hot salvo at him, saying the latter
did not buy a single rifle for any soldier when he was Head of
State.
His words: They say they will fight insecurity. Then ask him,
when he was the head of Nigeria government, did he buy a
single riffle for the Nigerian government? He did not buy
anything. They refused to equip the armed forces. Ask them,
what they did with their Defense Budget. No government
throughout the world equips the military overnight because
their equipment is too expensive. Armed forces are equipped
over years. Even if you send ten billion dollars today, you
cannot equip the Airforce, equip the Navy and equip the Army.
They refused to build the armed forces capacity. And now they
are telling us they will fight insecurity.” He said if Buhari and
all those who had ruled the country before now had equipped
the military properly things would have been different today.
Jonathan noted that the 2015 general election is about young
people, stating that his message was targeted at young
Nigerians, especially those who will be voting for the first time
in the February polls.
“I will address only a segment of Nigeria populace. I want to
address those people who are voting for the first time. Those
of you who have attained 18 years. That means I am
addressing those of you who are 20 years down. I don’t want
to address old people like me because we are stained already.
Those of you and those at home, listen to what I will say.
When you get home, tell your brother, your uncle and fathers
who are about 60 years old to confirm what the presidential
candidate and vice presidential candidate of the PDP
mentioned. The coming election is about the young people. Do
you vote for the youth to be relevant in the history of Nigeria
of to remain irrelevant? Those of you who will vote for the first
the first time, would you vote for hope for the Nigerian youth
to be relevant or to be treated as nonsense persons? And I
believe all of you want to be relevant. We have just introduced
our governorship candidate and you have seen how many of
them are your age bracket. No other party will give the youth
that opportunity. And they said they want to take power from
us. They tell lies and also hire people from all over the world
to tell lies against us.” The president seized the opportunity of
the occasion to debunk the insinuation that his government is
weak, asserting that his administration has made giant strides
in the fight against corruption, insecurity and in planning for
the future of the country.
On the anti-corruption war, Jonathan explained that fighting
corruption was not about arresting people, parading them on
television and dumping them in prison without due process.
“They want to get into power to jail their enemies, somebody
wakes up and thinks he can jail all his enemies if he gets to
power, today I can tell you we have arrested more people,
prosecuted and convicted more people since I came into
power. “For you to fight corruption you must take measures, if
they have succeeded in fighting corruption during their tenure
you won’t be talking about corruption today. “They said we
are weak, but we know some people who crated people
abroad and put them on the plane before they were inter­
cepted by superior powers. Any country that does not obey
rule of law is a jungle nation,” he added. Jonathan while
stating that his administration has built twelve new federal
universities to increase access to tertiary education and
almajiri schools in the north to empower the youths there
challenged the opposition to tell the nation their plans for the
youths. “They said we have no plans for the youths, they
should come and tell you what plan they have for the youth.
Ask them, when they were in power did they build nusery
school for anybody. They built prisons and I built universities
for you. “They said we have no plans, but we introduced the
Soverign Wealth Fund. “They want power by all means. All
what they want to do with power is to lock up their enemies. I
have no enemies to fight,” he declared.

When PDP’s campaign train stopped at Enugu


The campaign train of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) is
gradually but steadily moving across the nation. It stopped in
Enugu, the Coal City state last Friday when the presidential
flag bearer, Dr Goodluck Jonathan, wooed voters.
All roads led to Nnamdi Azikiwe Stadium venue as the
teeming supporters in various PDP regalia trooped out with
dances to the expansive arena. The turn-out was a further
proof that Enugu is a PDP state as all the streets in the state
were literally empty.
The crowd at the stadium had waited endlessly as the event
was initially billed to commence at 10 am. During the long
wait, the gospel artistes and Masters of Ceremony had a swell
time in their effort to fill the gap arising from the late arrival of
the President. The two outstanding gospel singers who
performed on the occasion, Felix Ndukwe and the Delta State-
born Sammy Okposo, gave the audience a full dose of their
stuff.
The singers intermittently sang praises of President Jonathan,
Governor Sullivan Chime and Enugu PDP candidate, Ifeanyi
Ugwuanyi.
President Jonathan finally arrived the venue at exactly 2.15
p.m. He was accompanied by his wife, Dame Patience, Vice
President Namadi Sambo, National Chairman of the party,
Alhaji Adamu Mu’azu, Deputy Senate President Ike
Ekweremadu, Deputy Speaker of the House of Representatives,
Emeka Ihedioha, Chime and Ugwuanyi.
The rally also had in attendance the entire PDP hierarchy from
the governors to members of the party’s National Executive
Committee, National Assembly members and candidates to
the governorship candidates of the party in this year’s general
elections.
Others who graced the occasion were former Senate
presidents and elder statesmen including former Vice President
of Nigeria, Dr Alex Ekwueme.
Political observers argued that even though the event has
come and gone, many issues came to the fore during the rally.
Some of them include:
Deconstructing Buhari
Many of those who listened to President Jonathan’s speech
were in agreement that it was merely targeted to deconstruct
the presidential candidate of the All Progressives Congress
(APC), Muhammadu Buhari.
Critical observers agree that substantially, his unscripted
speech was in response to previous statements made by the
APC flag bearer in various occasions. President Jonathan
accused Buhari of deceiving the people by promising that he
would revive the economy without correspondingly explaining
how he would achieve that.
The President wondered how Buhari could develop the
economy when he could not do so in office as Head of State
between 1983 to 1985.
“Is it now that Buhari cannot even remember his own phone
number that he can change the economy”, he asked.
President Jonathan who said although he did not like to go
personal during campaigns, said that “sometimes certain
things demand that certain things must be said”.
The President said that the APC candidate belonged to the
medieval age, adding that Buhari’s intention is to run the
Federal Government like a medieval king.
His words: “We cannot run the government as if we are in a
medieval age; we cannot run a government where somebody
said he would throw people into jail.
“You are not a medieval king- a medieval king can throw
somebody into jail but we have to follow the rule of law
because we cannot go back to the old days”.
President Jonathan was not done yet as he read the speech
made by former Head of State, Gen Ibrahim Babangida (rtd)
after overthrowing Buhari on August 27, 1985. The speech he
read was to justify the fact that Buhari does not keep his
promises.
Gen Babangida in the portion of the speech read by Jonathan
justified the overthrow of the APC flag bearer by pointing out
that Buhari did not live up to the promises he made to
Nigerians when he overthrew a democratically elected
government headed then by Alhaji Shehu Shagari.
The President quoted Babangida as saying: “The initial
objectives of Buhari’s intervention was betrayed as there was
a general deterioration of standard of living in the country”.
Many observers argue that Jonathan’s hard knocks on Buhari
made him to gloss over what in practical terms he would do
for the South East people and indeed Nigeria when he is re-
elected for a second term in office.
But the state governor, Sullivan Chime assured President
Jonathan that people of the state and indeed the entire South
East would support his re-election bid.
“The traditional rulers have told you that you have no
business campaigning in Enugu. We are here to support you.
We are here to celebrate our governorship candidate,
Ugwuanyi”, he told the President.
Handing over guber flag to Ugwuanyi
One of the items members of the party at the rally and
particularly people of Enugu State were anxiously waiting for
was the official handover of the 2015 governorship flag of the
PDP to Hon Ifeanyi Ugwuanyi. The anxiety over the flag was
obvious considering the struggle for the governorship seat.
Before the rally, there were still pockets of doubts over the
actual candidate of the PDP in Enugu State. Recall that one of
the contenders to the Lion Building, Senator Ayogu Eze had
claimed to be the PDP candidate in Enugu after holding a
parallel governorship primaries in Filbon Hotel, in the New
Haven part of the state.
But with Friday’s rally in Enugu, the struggle for the PDP flag
became history as the hierarchy of the party led by President
Jonathan officially handed over the flag to Ugwuanyi, who is
about rounding off his third term in the House of
Representatives.
When the real flag-off ceremony rolled off the ground, Muazu
who was called up to the podium after Ikeje Asogwa and
Governor Chime had presented their addresses added to the
profile of Ugwuanyi. The national chairman of the party said:
“this is one of the most popular candidates I have ever met in
this period of electioneering in our country”. He called on other
aspirants who had run against the candidate to join hands
with him and the party while also urging Ugwuanyi to work
with all party faithful whether they had run against him or
not. He paid tributes to elder statesmen in the South East
region such as Nnamdi Azikiwe, Nwafor Orizu, Chukwuemeka
Odimegwu Ojukwu and others who have contributed
immensely to the development of the country.
He thanked people of the South East for their show of support
and solidarity for the PDP which has made the party grow in
leaps and bounds.
Muazu thereafter formally handed over the party’s
governorship flag to Ugwuanyi, declaring that it was a flag of
victory from the PDP. Hon. Ugwuanyi enjoys overwhelming
support of Enugu PDP stakeholders, and the party faithful,
many of whom have constituted over 100 support groups
working to actualize his ambition.
Recall that the party stakeholders in the three senatorial
districts of the state had long adopted him as consensus
governorship candidate before the primary election.
A chieftain of the party and former member of the House of
Representatives, Hon USA Igwesi described the handover of
party flag to Ugwuanyi as a confirmation of victory for the
PDP in Enugu State.
He said that the development showed that the PDP believes in
the popular will of the people, adding that with Ugwuanyi’s
candidature, the ruling party could go to sleep as far as the
governorship election is concerned.
“In my entire political career, I have never seen any politician
who has enjoyed the support of his people like Ifeanyi
Ugwuanyi. This is unprecedented in the history of Enugu
State. The support is so overwhelming that even members of
other parties are solidly behind him. He is just waiting to be
crowned the next governor of Enugu State and I am sure he
will not disappoint the people”, he said.
Chairman of the PDP in Amachalla/Ikpuiga ward, Mr Hyacinth
Urama praised the PDP for ensuring the maintenance of
internal democracy in the party.
He said that the handover of the PDP flag to Ugwuanyi has
proved that truth will always prevail.
“The PDP is a family and when members of a family take a
decision, it is binding on all of them. In democracy, it is the
majority that carries the vote”, he said.
Speaking with newsmen after receiving the flag, Hon.
Ugwuanyi thanked the party and the people of Enugu State for
the confidence reposed in him and assured that he would
consolidate on the current gains and take the state to the next
level of development.
The Enugu PDP governorship flag bearer who promised a
robust campaign enthused: “The presentation of the party’s
flag to me by the President and our National Chairman is a
call to duty, a charge to work hard with my governor and the
rest of the team to deliver Enugu State to the PDP 100 per
cent as has been the tradition; and that I will surely do, God
being my helper”.
Absence of Ayogu and his supporters
Many curious supporters were quick to notice that Ayogu Eze,
the Senate Committee chairman on Works was conspicuously
absent in the PDP rally. It was observed that few members of
the PDP who still show solidarity to the Enugu North Senator
were also not near the crowded stadium venue of the rally.
The lesson
What many took away from the rally was that Enugu is a PDP
state and that the coming governorship election would not
change the overwhelming support people of the Coal City state
have for the ruling party. It is stating the obvious that no
other party has what it takes to dislodge the PDP in the battle
for the Lion building.
However, critical observers who monitored the rally argue that
the main challenge is how to convert the large turnout to
actual votes. Many insist that what is important is for the
teeming supporters to ensure that they get their permanent
voters’ cards that will qualify them to vote in the next gover­
norship election.

Asari- Dokubo flays Mbaka, says South’ll humiliate Buhariwith votes


Leader of the defunct Niger Delta Peoples Volunteer Force
(NDPVF), Alhaji Mujahid Asari-Dokubo has criticised Rev Fr
Ejike Mbaka over his castigation of the administration of
President Goodluck Jonathan and endorsement of the All
Progressives Congress (APC) candidate, General Muhammadu
Buhari.
Asari- Dokubo said Mbaka traded with God’s name. He
challenged Mbaka and others backing Buhari to show the
candidate’s legacies when he was head of state between 1983
and 1985.
His words: “ I think that when someone is shameless and is
not afraid of God and is giving messages that are his own
opinion and attributing them to God, he should be left alone to
be judged by God. It is unfortunate that some people are not
afraid of God and are trading with God’s name.
If Mbaka and others like him say Jonathan has failed and that
he is not good, we want them to show case Buhari’s legacies.
He was a former head of state and ran a parallel government
with the Petroleum Trust Fund ( PTF) under Abacha, but what
were his achievements? Mbaka is entitled to his opinion as a
person but it is immoral and criminal for him to attribute his
personal opinion as God’s own.”
Asari- Dokubo described the endorsement of Buhari by the
Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND) as
laughable insisting that MEND was non-existent.

Buhari/Osinbajo ticket brings ray of hope –Ladi Thompson


Rev. Oladimeji P. Thompson, Founder & Senior Pastor of
Lagos-based Living Waters Unlimited Church, is one man that
would not stop talking on the threat posed by the Boko
Haram Islamist sect to the unity of the country. For the
umpteenth time, he has cautioned that the leadership must
make conscious effort to stop the cancer, ravaging the nation.
In this interview, he speaks on a wide range of issues,
including what he describes as the ray of hope in the Buhari/
Osinbajo ticket. Excerpts:
What are your reflections ahead of February 14 presidential
elections?
For me, the Nigerian presidential election is a digression. This
is, perhaps, the most dangerous election that this country has
ever had since the early sixties. This is because the coming
election is a digression from the most important thing that is
happening in this country right now. The greatest force that
would determine the future of this country at the moment is
not the presidential election but the Boko Haram narratives.
What can make this election useful is if it becomes a tool that
would make the elections become the greatest force that
would determine the future of the country.
But if it is normal elections that would be business as usual,
then it will be partly responsible for burying Nigeria. As I am
speaking to you right now, you know that, at least, 22 local
government areas are under heavy Boko Haram influence.
Recall that I told you in January of last year that by the end of
2014, at least, three states would be under the thumb of Boko
Haram narratives. As things are going right now, nobody
wants us to get the truth. You know apart from being a
security consultant, I am also a pastor and we are the ones
that young soldiers are reaching out to for prayers.
These young Nigerians are dying everyday and many of them
are deserting the warfront. These young Nigerians have not
much faith in the war that they are being forced to fight. Now,
this is where the leadership matters a lot in a country in times
of war. You remember that three years ago, I had declared
that the current president was a war time president. As long
as we don’t accept that and continue to do as if he is not a
war time president, the future of the country is in jeopardy.
The Boko Haram narrative is a documented global problem
with its own local version in Nigeria. What makes the Nigerian
version very dangerous is that it is a mixture of an ancient
hybrid with the global one. It makes it more lethal, brutal and
dangerous than the Alqaeda, ISIS, etc. Right now, the Nigerian
version is very brutal and the second most dangerous in the
entire world. Now, there is a court martial going on and
involving many young Nigerian officers. The President and
Commander in-Chief should be held responsible if those boys
are killed.
This is because if a patient goes to the hospital and he has a
typhoid fever, the doctor who says they should be treating him
with drugs for malaria fever is the one that should be held
responsible and not the nurses that are fixing the doses for
the fever. One of the modus operandi of the Boko Haram
narratives all over the world is what we call infiltration. You
infiltrate the rank and file of the Nigerian Army, people in high
places. A lot of these young soldiers and junior officers in the
war front are aware and many of these officers’ confessions to
their priests and pastors are pointing out that there is a
division even in the Army.
Now, while the division is still small, it has to be checked
quickly. What makes the division worse is this: there had been
incidents where obviously senior Army officers have practically
been fingered helping the Boko Haram. In those incidents,
there had not been any case of court martial that resulted in
death sentence. In the case of the young boys in the Army,
you want to demoralize them further with the so-called court
martial. We understand that in martial law, we must be very
careful because there must be a chain of command.
But the break of the chain of command did not start with
these junior officers but at the top.
If the Commander in-Chief is not smart enough to know that
this will guarantee that we lose the war, we should not blame
anybody in the chain of command. Why are we definitely going
to lose the war and why is there going to be more bloodshed?
These young Army officers are dying every day. In fact, one
comment that one of the boys made to me is that many of his
mates who hit the warfront did not live to collect their first
pay. What are they getting that they are fighting for Nigeria?
They are paying them a pittance to go and take a bullet. Now
when they die, the signal being passed within the rank and file
of the Army is that it is more convenient for these young
officers to die than for them to be wounded.
I have followed a few of the wounded ones and I have noticed
that even in the so-called system, if they go to the hospital to
be treated, the insurance for them does not even cover the
treatment of soldiers. Go and confirm that many of the
wounded soldiers may have to spend their own money to take
care of themselves after they have been wounded at the war
front to defend you and I in this country.
I want to let you know that in many cases where they have to
go for x-rays and all that, they may not wait for the official
bottlenecks that have been erected. If you are a wounded
soldier, would you wait for these bottlenecks to be cleared
before you sort yourself out medically? Corruption that is
everywhere in the nation has entered the Army. Without
removing the scourge of corruption, we cannot win the war
against Boko Haram and which means that we should actually
be looking forward to the end of this country.
Do you share the impression in some quarters that the APC
government would be able to reposition the country?
I do not know about that and I do not know whether I am
going to agree with you on that a 100 per cent. The solution
to the Boko Haram narrative is not a military solution. The
military option to the solution to the Boko Haram narrative is
between 12 to 18 percent maximum anywhere in the world. As
long as we continue to think that it is going to be a military
affair mainly, we cannot beat Boko Haram and the end of the
country may not be far. Now, let me look at the presidential
hopefuls.
Whoever becomes the president, if he lacks the moral and
political will to execute what I am about to tell you now, we
are going back to square one. The worst is that after the melt
down, people would be saying why did anybody not foresee it?
By that time, everybody would be blaming and pointing
fingers. But where we are right now, the future is very
obvious. There are things that the person who will become
the president must do for the election to become a factor and
not a nuisance. Whoever comes as the president of Nigeria
must make plans to destroy corruption first in the Army.
If corruption is not destroyed in the Nigerian Army, we have
practically no defence. The Boko Haram is not just better
equipped, they are better motivated and they have the
capacity to sustain hostilities for much longer. There is
something imminent that has to be dealt with very fast.
In 1914 when we had the amalgamation, the key ingredient of
that arrangement is the key factor that is helping the Boko
Haram in Nigeria. I have left many things to zero in on this
factor because of its importance. One of the elements of the
amalgamation under colonial rule is that the two parties you
are joining together, you must make them distrust each other.
Their joining must be based on division, strife, distrust and
mistrust. Why do that? It is to make sure that the union is
forever dependent on the person who supervises it. You will
recall that Ahmadu Bello had said that the idea of a Nigeria is
the figment of the imagination of the British. I want to remind
you that he had said that Nigeria was a mere geographical
expression and I want you to recall that Obafemi Awolowo
agreed to that. I think that the only one who had a pan-
African vision was Dr Nnamdi Azikiwe.
Tafawa Balewa went further to say that if all the elements
that were joined together were left on their own, they would
never on their own come together. They were products of
social engineering of colonial power. There is no northern
leader in Nigeria that did not benefit from the policy of
northernisation of the country.
There is no southern leader who did not benefit from the
division in Nigeria. We have foolishly been building the country
on a foundation that cannot be built upon. President Goodluck
Jonathan is a product of compromise and accommodation. In
any other country at any other time, he could have been an
asset but not when you are in a country whose foundation is
on division.
Compromise would never bring progress. That is why you find
out that a man like Jonathan would go to Minna to go and
greet a former president of the country.
But what would say in the APC ticket where Buhari is the
Presidential candidate and Prof Osibajo is his vice?
If I want to talk about that, I would say that I see a ray of
hope. But I want to state categorically that President Buhari
like Babangida, Abdulsalami and others are all products of the
northernisation agenda of Nigeria. The only thing in favour of
Buhari is that he seems to be a more principled person and
would not use underhand tactics to advance his own cause.
However, if push comes to shove and have to choose between
the Southern and Northern parts of the country, I can bet you
that Buhari will choose what has helped him in his Army
career and what distinguished him.
For Osibajo, what he brings to the table is very unique and I
will tell you why. Just as Buhari is known to be a man of
integrity, Osibajo is a man of more integrity. Many Nigerians
may not know this much. I would tell you that many of the
people like me who would never have thought of voting for
Buhari before are already thinking of voting for him now all
because of Osibajo.
This is a combination that if they choose to work, will work
and can make things better. There is one thing that we would
like to hear from Buhari and we know that Osibajo is a
constitutional lawyer and it will help us.
Between Buhari and Osibajo, if they are able to come together
to say that what has been happening since 1914 which is that
Southerners are in competition, mistrust, distrust with their
brothers from the North, it will save the nation. If they can
come out to say that we are going to erase the line of
division, everything shall be well again. If they can come
together and agree that the North and South should work
together, the reason why corruption is growing in Nigeria
would be removed.

Aganga promises better days for SMEs


The Minister of Industry, Trade and Investment, Dr. Olusegun
Aganga, has said that Federal Government is currently
engaging all stakeholders in the private sector including the
small and medium enterprises operators in policies
formulation and other issues that concern business
development and economic growth in the country.
Aganga, who stated this at a workshop recently in Lagos,
disclosed that the Federal Government has approved the
creation of SMEs industrial zones where various SMEs
operators can converge to enjoy lowest cost amenities in the
running of their businesses.
He said the Council for Small and Medium Enterprises
inaugurated by the Federal Government has been saddled with
the responsibility of proffering solutions to the challenges of
the sub-sector, adding that it has found out the various
challenges militating against the development of SMEs and
was ready to address them through its inclusive economic
policy.
“As you know, the focus of this government is on inclusive
economy and you can’t have inclusive economy if you don’t
focus on micro, small and medium enterprises. They are the
engines of any economy anywhere in the world. What the
government is doing now is to make sure that we fully
understand the barriers, the problems SMEs have, and to have
an institutional approach to address their issues. We know
they have issues in terms of finance, we know they have
issues in terms of cost of operation, we know they have issues
in terms of market access, in terms of modern technology, all
these areas are the areas the new council established by the
President will be addressing, and one of the ways to address
the issues of their cost of production is to make sure they
have dedicated SME industrial zones legally,” he said.
Meanwhile, the President of the Nigerian Association of
Chambers of Commerce, Industry, Mines and Agriculture,
NACCIMA, Alhaji Abubakar Badaru, who commended the
government on its various efforts geared towards the
development of SMEs and especially the newly established
Council for SMEs, noted that the partnership between the
private sector, government and the media is moving the sector
forward as he advocated a stronger synergy that would move
the sector to the level of the global standard.
Commenting on agriculture development in the country,
Badaru said given the place of agriculture in national de­
velopment, especially as it remains the guarantee to food
security, job creation, raw materials production for industrial
growth and generation of foreign exchange for the country,
there was need to encourage the players in the sector to har­
ness its potentials.
“While we are not unaware of the enormity of the challenges
impeding the full realisation of the foregoing, NACCIMA is of
the view that the Federal Government should not rest on its
oars until we achieve the full realisation of the country’s
agricultural potentials.

Emenike rejects Qatar offer


Nigeria international, Emmanuel Emenike has rejected an offer
that promises him over five million Euros in wages and
bonuses from a Qatari club, AfricanFootball.com reported.
A close confidant of the AFCON 2013 top scorer exclusively
told AfricanFootball. com Emenike is now open to a move
away from Turkish champions, Fenerbahce, but turned down a
“massive” offer from Qatar because he still wants to play at
the top level in Europe for more years.
“Emenike is no more happy in Fenerbahce, he wants to move,”
the close confidant told AfricanFootball.com
“He reject an offer from Qatar that would have seen him
getting €5.5 per annum, but he wants to remain in the top
flight for more years, so he is not ready to move there for
now.
“There are clubs in other countries who want to sign him and
he may well head to one of the clubs now.”
Meanwhile, Emenike’s agent, Erdem Konyar had maintained he
had not entered into any talks with the several clubs linked
with the striker lately.
“I personally have not entered talks with Tottenham yet.
However, if Fenerbahce give permission we can enter
negotiations,” said the agent.
“There are also reports that AC Milan and Fiorentina are
interested in Emenike, but we have not met with them either.”
Fenerbahce President recently revealed a 10 million- Euro bid
was rejected for the Nigeria striker, who had netted twice this
season for the Turkish champions.
The Nigeria international has a release clause of £16 million in
his contract.

ABU DHABI FRIENDLY: EAGLES FALL TO ELEPHANTS


Hopes of Nigerians seeing a rebirth of the Super Eagles after
failing to qualify for the AFCON 2015 fell flat last night in the
Super Eagles’ team B international friendly encounter against
Equatorial Guinea bound Cote d’ Ivoire, as they fell 1-0
through an 84th minute goal from former Chelsea forward
Salomon Kalou.
The Nigerian side coached by Daniel Amokachi showed
resilence even as the Elephants attacked more in the game,
but they were unable to find a way through against the
equally impressive Super Eagles side who stood tall to them.
With both coaches fielding talented players in the build-up
game, the two teams treated the fans to a classic, but the
one-time African Cup of Nations winners nevertheless
managed to emerge triumphant with Kalou’s strike.
Super Eagles stand-in coach Daniel Amokachi handed starts
to enterprising Stanley Dimgba and Nigeria Professional
Football League top marksman Mfon Udoh.
There was a worrying sight for Elephants fans in the opening
exchanges when the dangerous Gambo Mohammed side
footed his effort from close range.
Cote D’Ivoire fielded majority of its stars with African
Footballer of the Year, Yaya Toure getting a good match from
the fearless Joseph Nathaniel in the midfield.
AS Roma winger, Gervinho should have given the Elephants
the lead in the 27th minute of the match when he beat the
Nigeria defence, but he was denied by goalkeeper Chigozie
Agbim.
Cote D’Ivoire threatened again when Serge Aurier headed wide
from a corner kick and the first half ended goalless in Abu
Dhabi.
In a bid to grab the winner, the Cote D’Ivoire technical crew
led by Hervé Renard threw more bodies upfront and
pressurized the Super Eagles side in the second half. At the
home stretch, Newcastle United midfielder Chieck Tiote found
Kalou in the area and the forward slotted the ball past Agbim
in goal for Nigeria.
Nigeria’s tour of United Arab Emirates will come to an end
with a game against the Falcons of Sudan on 17th January,
2015.
Meanwhile, former Swiss junior international, Steven Ukoh,
whose application to represent Nigeria at senior level was
recently approved by world football-governing body, FIFA,
made his international debut for the team as a second half
substitute.

Okocha, Oliseh snubbed in Bundesliga legends list


Bayern Munich defender, David Alaba is the only footballer
with links to Nigeria named by celebrated German newspaper,
Bild in its ranking of the Top 100 Players to grace the
Bundesliga.
Surprisingly, retired Nigeria internationals Austin Okocha,
Sunday Oliseh and Jonathan Akpoborie were not considered
for selection, but ex Eintracht Frankfurt hero, Tony Yeboah
made the final cut.
Though Okocha, Oliseh and Akpoborie were not endorsed by
the Berlin-based publication, the trio excelled at Eintracht
Frankfurt, Borussia Dortmund and VfB Stuttgart.
Austria international David Alaba was ranked in 98th spot
behind ex VfB Stuttgart defensive midfielder, Sami Khedira,
who now turns out for Real Madrid.
The 22-year-old had been on the books of Bayern Munich
since 2008, and had appeared 113 times in the Bundesliga,
scoring 9 goals. The talented wing back, whose stock is
increasing every year, was German champion in 2010, 2013
and 2014.
The top 10 were made up entirely of Germans and there were
three players, who still play in the Bundesliga – Manuel Neuer,
Bastian Schweinsteiger and Philipp Lahm – who became
world champions last year.
German football icon, Franz Beckenbauer followed by Gerd
Müller and Lothar Matthaus are the top three players in that
order.
A panel of renowned football experts, including Ottmar Hitzfeld
and Otto Rehhagel determined the players that made the list.

Abia PDP primaries ruse (1)


The way some journalists defend the indefensible amazes me.
How can anyone, apart from the cheerleaders of the outgoing
governor of Abia State, Theodore Ahamefula Orji, in clear
conscience and God’s fear, declare that last month’s prima­
ries of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in Abia State was
free and fair and ultimately “successful”? If anyone is looking
for governmental rehabilitation, the public space should not be
desecrated in pursuit of such selfish goals in very
unprofessional and deceitful way, too!
Writing in THISDAY of December 22, 2014, a former Special
Assistant on Media to Gov. Orji who was kicked out of service
by Ochendo a long time ago, Kingsley Emereuwa, lousily
declared that “the successful outcome of the Abia State Peo­
ples Democratic Party primaries has disappointed those who
predicted otherwise” without giving readers the conspectus of
“success”. Nothing can be as insensitive as this. So, because
the governor was aided and abetted by the PDP to push
through his vaulting plot to foist a stooge on the state as his
successor translates to “successful outcome and
disappointment for the opposition.” It is a tragedy that those
who should watch the society and keep public functionaries on
their toes are the ones tacitly conniving with cursed politicians
and endorsing electoral fraud because of messy porridge and
blood money used for sleazy transactions.
Who in Abia State (and, indeed, Nigeria) does not know that
the process that threw up Dr. Okezie Ikpeazu as the PDP gov­
ernorship candidate in the state was a big charade with a char­
latanistic paradigm? It was very clear right from the build-up
that Gov. Orji and his accomplices were hell-bent and
desperate in ensuring that Ikpeazu (Back Justice) emerged the
party’s standard bearer in next month’s election. Only an
apocalypse or rapture would have derailed that sinister move.
Everything imaginable was thrown into that project which was
catalysed by the unwholesome deal between PDP governors
and Abuja. I told people close to me that Ikpeazu, as an
establishment aspirant, was going to represent the ruling
party as its candidate in the state. Whether he will win—which
is akin to evil triumphing over good—is a secondary matter. If
the PDP had allowed democratic tenets to hold sway, Ikpeazu
would most probably not have been shortlisted in the first
place for obvious reasons some of which will be adduced
presently.
There was no doomsday prophecy about the primaries in Abia.
The point that was being foretold was that Gov. Orji’s tenure
as the chief executive of the state from 2007 to this wind-
down era has been nothing to write home about. Therefore, to
now plant someone to perpetuate incompetence, incapacity
and cousinship surrogacy is the concern of most of us in the
oppositional camp. In this kind of matter, you need to look
beyond the circumference of issues and extrapolate to the
bigger picture of the next four years in the first instance. This
is the point that needs to be understood by government pikins
who cannot look beyond their noses. The issue is not just
about primaries, but what calibre of person comes on board.
In a fair and free contest, this essence would have been taken
care of by candidacies. But, in the unfortunate circumstance
that we have found ourselves, the basis for that no longer
exists. Barren analysts should understand the trajectory of
interventions, fears and suspicions before making beggarly
pontifications and harebrained conclusions.
The illusion that anyone who gets the PDP ticket in Abia State
automatically becomes the next governor must be stupefying
by now. In 2007, the Progressive People’s Alliance (PPA)
under the astute leadership of its progenitor and former
governor of Abia State, Dr. Orji Uzor Kalu, defeated the PDP in
Abia and Imo states at a time when there was even a
measure of good governance in both states on the PDP
platform. Now that the people are regretting returning to the
PDP because of Gov. Orji’s disastrous leadership, it would be
easier for a camel to pass through the eye of a needle than for
a any (not just Ikpeazu) PDP candidate to win in Abia in
2015! The outlandish and shameless rigging that
characterized the 2011 re-run governorship poll in the state
cannot be contemplated by any sane fellow now let alone
attempting any militarization of elections or other forms of
electoral theft. The chemistry of charged atmosphere and
awareness currently is so tense that it would be suicidal for
any bloke in the corridors of power to manipulate anything.
Let’s take just one stupidity from Emereuwa before we round
off the first leg of this two-part contribution: “Many paid com­
mentators and a section of the media (a veiled and cowardly
reference to this medium) for some parochial interests were
busy insulting their readers’ reasoning by tales of impending
implosion in the state chapter of the party….” Little minds
must be little minds just like pigs! People are talking of Abia
State and who will redeem it after this locust time round and
one sickening clown is talking of a chapter of the PDP! This
perpetually idiotic rehash about “paid commentators” and their
“paymaster” (in apparent imbecilic reference to Dr. Kalu and
his media team) by all serving or past crumb eaters under
Gov. Orji’s table is not just ludicrous but crazy. Which gov­
ernor in this country indulges in media mercantilism than Gov.
T. A. Orji? The propagandistic (media) budget of Abia State
government since 2007 is more than enough to reconstruct
the whole of Aba and Umuahia roads!
Yet, none of them is safe at any speed! Between Dr. Kalu and
Gov. Orji (a joint owner of Lagos-based Next weekly pub­
lication and a few online portals and provincial rags in and
around Umuahia specifically for the futile demystification and
impossible humiliation of his benefactor), who is the greater
media “paymaster”? Even non-Abians know of Ochendo’s
unparalleled disinformation merchandise and media insurgency
with me as a celebrated scapegoat! Between those of us in
The Sun employ and unpaid (eh?) hacks like Kingsley
Emereuwa/his co-travellers in Lagos and Umuahia, who are
serving the society better? We shall soon know!
Government apologists should look for noble engagements—
they should not dissipate energy on the shambolic Abia PDP
primaries. I will be embarrassingly disappointed if we (Abians)
do not ensure that Back Justice does not come to the front
burner!

Time to pass PIB into law


The non-passage into law of the Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB)
has been blamed for so many problems in the oil and gas
sector of the economy. International Oil Companies (IOCs) and
some political interests in the country have been accused of
sabotaging the numerous efforts to get the bill passed by the
National Assembly.
On December 31, last year, the Trade Union Congress (TUC) in
Rivers State added its voice to others calling for the passage
of the bill into law. TUC held that since 2009 when the bill
was first introduced, no new Final Investment Decision (FID)
had been taken on any oil and gas project in the country. TUC
Chairman, Chika Onuegbu, pointed out that the falling price of
crude oil should serve as an impetus to the legislature to im­
mediately pass the bill, because the country has lost billions
of US dollars in oil and gas investment due to its non-
passage. Onuegbu disclosed that investors are adopting a wait
and see attitude and refraining from making any new
investment until the bill is passed. To TUC, the PIB represents
a great opportunity for Nigeria to lay a solid foundation for oil
and gas operations in the country and ensure that the nation’s
petroleum resources benefit Nigerians.
There is no doubt that the concerns of the TUC, like others
before them, are genuine and need to be given deserved
attention by all the stakeholders in the industry. The PIB,
when it becomes law, will among other things encourage
exploitation of oil and gas in the country, commercialise gov­
ernment’s interests in the industry, deregulate and liberalise
the downstream petroleum sector, optimise gas supplies to
the domestic gas market, reform the fiscal regime, ensure
openness and transparency in the industry as well as the
protection of oil-producing environment and the development
of local content.
Opposition to the passage of the bill is traceable to the fears
of oil majors about government’s increased control of the
industry through the role assigned to the Minister of Pe­
troleum Resources in the PIB, and the unfavourable new tax
regimes. The local opposition to the bill is also very potent.
The sharp division along sectional lines in the National As­
sembly, and the politicisation of the proposed petroleum law
is also contributing to the delay in its passage. Let all the
contentious sections of the bill be revisited with a view to
making them acceptable to all the stakeholders. It is high
time the controversy surrounding the bill was resolved once
and for all. The delay in its passage is stalling progress in the
oil and gas sector of the economy. This is a luxury the nation
can ill afford.
The PIB means well for the country’s oil and gas industry, in­
cluding the oil majors and the oil-producing communities.
Those opposing the passage of the bill, especially our
politicians, should jettison their narrow interests and consider
the bigger picture of the obvious benefits the bill will bring to
the country. Let the legislators be guided by patriotism and
the overall national interest, rather than sectional and personal
interests. Let them ensure speedy passage of the PIB.
Transparency of all operations in the oil and gas sector will
block leakages in the system such as corruption, inefficiency,
oil theft and other sharp practices. This will translate to more
revenue earnings for the government.
More local participation in the sector will mean more jobs for
Nigerians. The petroleum law will also ensure the protection of
the oil-producing environment and ensure that the inhabitants
of the area also benefit from the exploitation of minerals
found in their vicinity.
We, therefore, call on all the stakeholders to work in concert
to ensure that the PIB is passed into law by the current
National Assembly. Let them eschew the differences that have
worked against the passage of this vital bill that is expected
to revolutionise operations in the oil and sector. Let the PIB
be passed into law without any further delay by the Senator
David Mark-led National Assembly. On no account should the
bill be passed to the next National Assembly.

2 feared dead, 18 rescued in Lagos boat mishap


At least two persons were feared dead at the weekend when
an 18-seater passenger boat in which they were travelling ran
into another boat along the Ojo-Tin-Can Island water channel
in Lagos.
The victims, whose identities could not be ascertained as at
press time were suspected to be the boat operator and his
assistant. They were said to be the only ones on board the
second boat as at the time of the accident. However, local
divers reportedly rescued the 18 others who were travelling on
board the passenger boat. They were said to be hospitalised
in an undisclosed hospital at Ojo, Lagos.
It was gathered that the boat carrying the 18 passengers
allegedly took off from the Ojo area of Lagos at about 11.30
a.m. on Friday and was heading towards Tin-Can/Coconut
when it rammed into the second boat coming from the
opposite direction. It was also learnt that those on the Tin-
Can -bound boat recovered the bodies of the two victims from
the water.
They were rushed to an undisclosed hospital located in
Coconut area, where they were confirmed dead, it was
gathered.
“Those who could swim, swam their way to a nearby island,
while few others were rescued by a combined team of
fishermen and local dredgers,” a witness said. The source
blamed the assistant operator of the boat they were traveling
in for the accident. The source, who identified himself as
Subar, a clearing agent, who works with a shipping company
in Lagos, attributed the incident to the recklessness of the
assistant operator of the boat, who was sitting down instead
of standing while steering the boat.

People think a healthy lifestyle means going on a diet –NkemEzeilo, General Medical Practitioner


Dr Nkem Ezeilo lives and breathes for a healthy lifestyle. You
can never catch her promoting anything else other than how
people can remain healthy. She is a general practitioner,
speaker and author. She runs a private practice in London’s
Harley Street.
Dr. Kem as she is fondly called, is passionate about a healthy
lifestyle as a way of preventing and reversing disease and as
a key to improving quality of life. Her heart also beats for
women empowerment as a fundamental right of every female.
To this end, she works tirelessly to spread the message
through her day job as a GP, and her second career as a
keynote speaker and author.
Her first book deals with women’s empowerment and is
entitled, Inspirational Blueprints of Personal Success for
Women. She has won several awards and has spoken at the
British Parliament as part of the Black History Month
celebrations. Recently, she was appointed a Health and
Lifestyle Expert / Advisor for BBC Radio 5 Live afternoon
edition.
Ezeilo told Sunday Sun that the biggest misconception people
have about being healthy is going on a diet.
Excerpts:
Why do you enjoy talking about healthy lifestyle? I enjoy
talking about healthy lifestyle because I know how powerful it
is to set people free from illness and untimely death. I see it
work for people every time and each time I see someone
healed or lose weight or their blood pressure becomes normal
and things like that , just from a healthy lifestyle, not with
drugs, I feel even more fired up to share the message wider
still.
How has the journey of promoting healthy lifestyle been?
It’s been really good. People are truly eager to hear this
message. They are so fed up with taking drugs which give
them side effects yet not treating the actual cause of their
illness. So, I gave a healthy lifestyle seminar first in 2010, then
in 2012 but since the first one, people have been inviting me
to various events to speak on the topic, especially business
people who realise that without health they have no wealth.
How do you handle the challenges you face?
I handle the challenges I face talking about health first with a
positive attitude. I see challenges as building blocks destined
to make me better. So, I remain thankful for them and then
seek solutions for them.
What are some of the high moments of your career as a
general practitioner?
They include speaking at the British Parliament during last
year’s Black History Month, winning the Motivational Speaker
of The Year award at Women4Africa, winning the GAB Award
for Excellence in Health 2013, winning the Life changers
Personality of the Year Award, 2013, and being recently ap­
pointed Health and Lifestyle Advisor by the BBC Radio 5Live.
What about your low moments?
I can’t think of any, to be honest. I’ve loved my career every
step of the way.
In your years of practice, what does it really take to be
healthy?
It takes strengthening each of the 10 Pillars of Health, which
are mindset, nutrition, elimination, gut health, hydration,
sunshine (Vitamin D), Oxygenation, activity (exercise) and
rest.
What are some of the practical ways Nigerians can maintain
a healthy lifestyle?
First of all, we need to change our attitude and mindset about
health, foods and things related to them. Nigerians need to
realise that being overweight is not a sign of wealth, it’s a
sign of illness and it’s a time bomb. It’s not a sign of ‘cash
madam’ or ‘big oga.’ Being overweight is a sign which if
ignored can lead to untimely death. So, change the mindset of
“it’s attractive to be overweight.” It’s unhealthy. Then, we
need to realise that when it comes to nutrition, plant foods, es­
pecially green ones, are king. Meat is secondary, not crucial
and excess of it could lead to illness. Our flag is green and
white.
More green than white even. We should use that as a guide to
remind ourselves that our meals should always have more
green than white on our dishes also. The greener a dish is, the
healthier it is. So, for instance, if you are eating a rice dish,
ideally it should be brown or wholegrain rice but in either case
have a lot of vegetables with the dish. Always have more
green vegetable than rice or yam or whatever.
If you are already obese or overweight or already suffering
from diabetes or hypertension, I would be even stricter and tell
you to avoid the white foods for a few weeks until your
condition is under control then you can introduce the brown or
wholegrain versions of them. If you are eating an eba and
soup dish, make it such that there’s way more soup with
vegetables and fish than the eba. Think more greens in every
meal.
What’s your typical day like?
I don’t have a typical day because of my schedule. However,
certain things happen regardless of what my work day is like,
but not necessarily in this order. I have quiet time and work-
outs which involve either running, going to the gym, work-outs
at home or outdoors. I prepare my meal for the day, I spend
time with my son, work, sleep and study because I have to be
up to date with the latest in my field so I can serve people
better.
What misconceptions do people have about promoting a
healthy lifestyle?
The biggest misconception I’ve come across is that people
think a healthy lifestyle means going on a diet. They couldn’t
be farther from the truth, for a diet is an unhealthy restriction
you place on yourself in a bid to lose weight. This is not
healthy, because when you come off the diet you pile the
weight back on with interest. It’s better to improve your entire
lifestyle all round and not placing unnecessary restrictions on
your eating routine. Just eat healthy.
What do you love most about what you do?
I love seeing peoples’ lives changed even in ways they didn’t
expect. Some people regain their self confidence when they
have lost weight or when they come off their medication etc
and when I read their testimonies, I feel so honoured and
blessed to be a part of their success stories. One lady even
conceived after being told she wouldn’t be able to because of
her medical condition. But once she adopted the healthy
lifestyle principles I taught her, in less than a year she
conceived and now she is a happy mother of a bouncing baby
boy.
How financially rewarding is your job? I can’t complain about
the financial reward. I’m thankful to have a job that I actually
enjoy doing.
What else are you passionate about?
I’m passionate about women empowerment issues and, in
fact, my first hard copy book was an inspirat ional success
book for women. I love to help women break free from limiting
beliefs that hold them b a c k from fully expressing
themselves in every way.
How do you juggle your busy speaking schedules and your
personal responsibilities?
It’s easy to juggle when you know your priorities. So, for
example, my priorities are God, me, family, work and socials, in
that order. So, I take care of the important things first before
anything else. It can be a challenge sometimes but you have
to do what you have to do, so I keep pushing on.
What gives you the strength to move on whenever you feel
like giving up?
If I feel like giving up, I remind myself why I am doing what
I’m doing. Thinking of that gives me the strength to push on
against any odds I may face. I then keep reminding myself
that I can do it, and that’s why it’s been given to me to do.
What are some of the things that you r e l a x with?
I relax with music, especially smooth jazz, a nice warm bath, a
good book (fiction), and a good movie.

Desmond Elliot hosts talent hunt show for upcomingfilmmakers


A film production company, 2et Media Network Limited, has
created a platform for upcoming artistes to be in the
mainstream of filmmaking in Nigeria. Tagged: “Unleash Ur
Creativity”, two groups of 25 artistes will be selected and
camped for a month during which they will learn the rudiments
of filmmaking and then shoot a short film. They will be re­
quired to conceptualize a story, produce and premiere it within
the period. The movie will be premiered to an audience on live
TV and the winning group will get N10 million to produce a
feature film.
According to the organizers, the programme is geared towards
empowering upcoming acts, who have never had the op­
portunity of playing in the big league. The artistes selected will
comprise storytellers, actors, cameramen, editors, musicians
and songwriters. While they are working, the audience will
watch their efforts and get to know how things are done
behind the camera from scripting, casting, down to choosing
of locations, rehearsals, principal photography, and editing of
the movie.
Seven locations are being considered for the camping. They
include Obudu Ranch Resort in Cross River State, Abuja, Akwa
Ibom, Edo, Bayelsa, Kogi and Lagos States.
While seasoned filmmakers will visit the artistes from time to
time to give them practical tips on the art and science of
filmmaking, popular actor and filmmaker, Desmond Eliot has
been penciled to anchor the first season of the show which
would aired on AIT and other satellite TV stations.
Put together by Eyaba Emmanuel Tagbo, the show is endorsed
and supported by Diamond Bank, Directors Guild of Nigeria,
Royal Paradise Limited, Foboche International Limited, TGM
Media, Signature magazine, and Nigerian Film Corporation
among others.

World’s 12 highest-paid DJs in 2014


Calvin Harris is once again EDM’s Cash King, pulling in $66
million over the past 12 months. The top 10 earners on our
list racked up a staggering $268 million this year (2014), 11%
more than the $241 million haul of last year’s (2013) top 10.
Read on to see the full list.
1. 1: CALVIN HARRIS – $66 MILLION
Born Adam Richard Wiles, the former grocery store stocker
earned $66 million in our scoring period, playing more than
125 gigs. He’s found great success in the pop world, working
with the likes of Rihanna and Kesha, which has helped him
land headline gigs not only at EDM-focused events but also
at festivals like Coachella. Harris continues to play regularly in
Las Vegas where he has a multi-year deal at America’s
biggest nightclub, Hakkasan.
1. 2: DAVID GUETTA – $30 MILLION
The former Parisian club manager commands some of the top
fees in Las Vegas but stays true to his European roots,
maintaining his weekly F**k Me I’m Famous residency in
Ibiza. In the past 12 months, he’s spent time on tour with
Rihanna and has penned songs for Britney Spears and Lady
Gaga on their latest albums. In March, he divorced Cathy
Guetta, his wife of 22 years and long-time business partner.
1. 3 (TIE): AVICII – $28 MILLION
Just 24 years old, the Swedish DJ notched the best year of his
career on the strength of his debut album, ‘True’. The record
included ‘Wake Me Up’, which became the first electronic song
ever to move more than 4 million units in the United States.
He continues to clean up on the road, taking home six-figure
sums every time he spins at a club, which he did 80 times
during our scoring period alone.
1. 3 (TIE): TIESTO – $28 MILLION
In recent years, the veteran Dutch DJ has shifted his focus
from Ibiza to Las Vegas, where he now has a massively
lucrative residency with megaclub, Hakkasan. Playing over 100
shows yet another year in a row, Tiesto has pulled in $60
million over the past 24 months, a total topped only by Calvin
Harris.
1. 5: STEVE AOKI – $23 MILLION
For the first time, Aoki cracks the top five after playing 277
shows in our scoring period. He sometimes plays three shows
in a day, and his schedule had almost double the amount of
shows of anyone on our list (Aoki tells Forbes he’s mastered
the art of the power nap, sleeping in two or three hour bursts
while traveling between gigs). He’s also boosted by
endorsements with Bud Light, Guitar Center and Scion, and
holds a minority stake in headphone company, Sol Republic.
1. 6: AFROJACK – $22 MILLION
Nick van de Wall, better known as Afrojack, released his long-
anticipated first studio album, ‘Forget The World’ in May. After
telling Forbes he turned down higher offers in Las Vegas to
stay at the Wynn, he quickly bolted for a residency at
Hakkasan. Afrojack played nearly 150 shows in our scoring
period; earnings include endorsements from Nike and G-Star
RAW, where he has his own clothing collection.
1. 7: ZEDD – $21 MILLION
The 24-year-old protégé of Skrillex is now out-earning his
mentor, thanks to a nightly DJ fee that has soared from $
20,000 last year into the low six figures. His production for
pop stars like Justin Bieber and Lady Gaga, as well as his
own album, ‘Clarity’, which spawned a platinum single of the
same name, have fueled Zedd’s rise.
1. 8: KASKADE – $17 MILLION
Born Ryan Raddon, the DJ’s 10th album, ‘Atmosphere’,
earned him a Grammy nomination for Best Dance/Electronica
Album. The father of three played more than 120 dates during
our scoring period, including about 30 shows in Las Vegas.
Outspoken on Twitter, he’s taken to the microblogging service
to bash his former record label and critics of EDM culture.
6. 9: SKRILLEX – $16.5 MILLION
In March, the six-time Grammy winner released his latest
album, ‘Recess’, to opening week sales of 48,000. The LP has
a long way to go to catch his 2010 smash, ‘Scary Monsters’
and ‘Nice Sprites’, but he doesn’t need record sales to pad
his coffers: Skrillex earns big from live shows, scoring films
like ‘Wreck-It Ralph’, and from his OWSLA label.
1. 10: DEADMAU5 – $16 MILLION
The mouse-head costume-wearing DJ barely played one-tenth
the amount of shows that some of the higher-ranked names
on this list did, but he made them count, playing mostly
lucrative festival gigs that can earn him in the neighborhood of
half a million dollars for a night’s work. A booming merch
business also pads his bottom line.
1. 11: HARDWELL – $13 MILLION
Voted the No. 1 electronic dance music artist in the world by
fans in the annual DJ Magazine Top 100 poll, Hardwell debuts
on Forbes ’ list of top earners. His debut album expected to
come out in the New Year. Like fellow Dutch DJs Tiesto and
Armin van Buuren, Hardwell operates his own record label,
Revealed Recordings, which he founded in 2010. His ‘I Am
Hardwell’ tour comes to the U.S. in the fall and will conclude
with a November show at Madison Square Garden.
1. 12 (TIE): ARMIN VAN BUUREN -$12 MILLION
The Dutch DJ spent a great deal of the last year (2013)
playing dates in support of his album, ‘Intense’, released in
May 2013. His tour included dates in 21 cities and featured
six-hour performances from the 37-year-old trance king. He
co-founded dance label, Armada Music in 2003, and still helps
run the business; last year, he was nominated for a Grammy
for best dance recording for ‘This Is What It Feels Like’.
1. 12 (TIE): STEVE ANGELLO – $12 MILLION
Swedish House Mafia pulled in $25 million last year (2013) in
its swan song as a group, and now its members are earning
even more: Steve Angello alone pulled in $12 million. By
himself, he still commands six-figure fees for club gigs; he’ll
release a new solo album this fall. Will there be a reunion?
“Uh, no,” he says.
-Culled from Forbes

Floxy drops Sweet Dreams


For sexy singer, Chinwendu Florence Izuchuk aka Floxy, the
waiting is over as she is poised to release her version of
Beyoncé’s Sweet Dream any moment from now .
According to her, she put the release of the song on hold for
personal reasons and has just realized that this is the best
time for it. Giving reasons on why she chose to do a song in
the way she did, Floxy said “the industry deserves variety and
anyone who can do anything to bring it in should do it.
“We have had a lot of dancehalls and shoki. I believe we
should start thinking like creative people, a little of this and
that won’t hurt at all. We give people what to step on, what
to dance on and even what to wave on. Why can’t we give
them what to sleep on and maybe love songs that are really
love songs? No one dances while meditating and Nigerian
music industry is too big to be a one-genre industry,” She
said.
The Ebonyi State-born artiste has promised her fans around
the country greater things in 2015, while also urging them to
pray for her success in the New Year.
Somik produced Sweet Dreams, a slower version of the
original song by Beyoncé.