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Tuesday, 27 January 2015

Nigeria holds great prospects for investors –Chidoka


Nigeria holds great opportunities for her citizens who wish to
invest in the recent projections that the economy would
continue to grow at the rate of over 6 per cent for the next 20
years, Minister of Aviation, Chief Osita Chidoka, has said.
Chidoka said there was no need for citizens to be disillusioned
but urged them to look inward as the abundant human and
natural resources make the country a big market for goods
and services, the two key areas that would serve as stimulant
for growing the economy.
He made this known when he delivered the 44th Convocation
Lecture of the University of Nigeria, Nsukka (UNN) entitled,
“Rebuilding the Nigerian Dream: Mapping the Building Blocks.”
Chidoka said that Nigerians are fastidious and therefore have
the tendency to criticise their country even when it is
unnecessary, adding that although that attitude is seemingly
wrong but it spurs the citizens and government to do things
better.
“The most virulent critics of Nigeria are Nigerians. A few years
ago Nigerians celebrated one year of no blackouts in Ghana.
Even though no such celebration took place in Ghana,” he
lamented.
He noted that Nigerians have inherent elements to succeed in
every endeavour and those elements include superiority
complex, hard work and the readiness to sacrifice today for
better tomorrow.
Chidoka said that although the Nigerian education system is
severely criticised by her citizens, but Nigerians who studied in
Nigerian schools like the UNN have distinguished themselves
within and outside the country, particularly in the United
States of America (USA) where they remain the most
successful professionals among the black population.
“The criticism of our education system and the lamentations
about the so-called Nigerian Factor notwithstanding, the
Nigerian Diaspora has been singled out as one of the most
successful black Diasporas in the world. In the United States,
Nigerian-Americans dramatically outperform Americans in
terms of income. In their book, The Triple Package, Professors
Amy Chua and Jed Rubenfeld explain that Nigerians are over-
represented in the field of medicine, higher education, law and
investment banking (Chua & Rubenfeld, 2014).
“Why are Nigerians so successful? Because of the way we
raise our children. According to the authors, we Nigerians
possess the three traits that breed success: a superiority
complex – an idea that we are special in some way; insecurity
– the fear that if we don’t work hard we will fail; and impulse
control – the ability to delay gratification in the short term for
better outcomes in the future. Even if you had never attended
this institution, but by the virtue of being raised as a Nigerian,
you already have the tools for success,” the Minister said.

Blatter gets ‘solid’ African support


African countries have vowed to vote overwhelmingly for Sepp
Blatter in this year’s Fifa elections
“Africa is solidly behind Blatter.,” said Kwesi Nyantakyi, the
president of the Ghana FA.
Nyantakyi, who is also a Confederation of African Football
executive committee member added: “You will find he is very
popular on the continent.”
On 29 May, Blatter will seek a fifth term as president that will
take him past his 80th birthday.
Dutch football association president Michael van Praag
announced on Tuesday his intention to run following similar
moves by former Fifa deputy secretary general Jerome
Champagne and Prince Ali Bin Al-Hussein of Jordan.
Former France international David Ginola has also announced
his intention to stand but his is widely regarded as being no
more than a publicity stunt.
But Blatter’s prospective opponents are likely to get little
support from the 53 African voters.
“The continent is united behind him,” added former South
African FA president Molefi Oliphant, who still serves on the
Caf executive.
“We made a formal endorsement of his candidacy last year at
our meeting in Rio de Janeiro already.”
Previous endorsements from Caf, however, have not
necessarily translated into votes.
African football’s controlling body promised Lennart
Johansson a block of votes in 1998 but member associations
took no heed and helped Blatter to victory.
In 2002 Caf president Issa Hayatou failed to muster significant
support from his own continent and lost heavily to Blatter.
Affection for Blatter stems from the generous financial
assistance he has given Africa during his 17-year tenure.
“He has done a lot for the continent. It is he who has set up
the financial assistance programmes and who through the
Goal project has built infra structure in all of the countries,”
added Nyantakyi.
“The Europeans don’t understand that. They say it is not his
own money but Fifa’s but that’s not the point.
“He is the one who set up all the assistance programmes that
have helped boost African football.”
Goal is Blatter’s pet project, inaugurated not long after he
came to power in 1998 that has built training centres,
accommodation, pitches and offices for cash-strapped
associations.
Under Fifa’s Financial Assistance Programme, introduced in
2001, each of the ruling body’s 209 member associations
receive generous grants with more than $1 billion paid out
during Blatter’s tenure.
( BBC )

AFCON 2015: Equatorial Guinea foresees tough quarter-finals


Equatorial Guinea veteran Juvenal Edjogo-Owono has said he
expects the AFCON hosts to come up with a difficult
quarterfinal after his team finished second in Group A.
On Saturday, Nzalang Nacional will battle the winners of
Group B, who are likely to be Tunisia or Cape Verde, in
Ebebiyin for a place in the last-four.
“We are going to enjoy this qualification with our fans and our
people and start to prepare for the quarter-finals. We don’t
know our opponents yet, but it will be very tough,” said
Juvenal, who also featured when Equatorial Guinea reached
the knockout stage in 2012, when they co-hosted the
competition with neighbours Gabon.
The Andorra-based midfielder said his team deserved 2-0 win
over Gabon.
“The Gabon players are well known and play for great
European teams. It was important for us to reach half-time on
a tie, to keep our chances until the end,” he said.
“Gabon has a lot of qualities, but so do Equatorial Guinea. We
played our match and deserved the victory.”
“We approached all three games in the same way, against
more fancied opponents, with conviction and humility.”
Gabon’s coach slams penalty decision
Head coach of Gabon, Jorge Costa has blamed their exit in the
on-going 2015 Africa Cup of Nations (Afcon) to a poor
decision by the centre referee.
The hosts Equatorial Guinea bundled out Costa’s team 2-0 in
a Group A match played at the Bata Stadium on Sunday. “As
hosts they only needed a soft penalty to be able to win. That
penalty was the turn of the game,” a bitter Costa told
AfricanFootball.com after the game.
Costa said the referee from Cote d’Ivoire Doue Noumandiez
Desire made a wrong call to award the penalty. “Even after
watching replays on TV you can tell that there was no
penalty,” reasoned the coach.
The hosts scored through Javier Angel Balboa’s second half
penalty and another goal by substitute Ivan Edu Salvador.
Coach Claude Le Roy’s Congo Brazzaville’s team qualified as
Group A table leaders after their 2-1 win over Burkina Faso
2-1.
Balboa made a driving run before surging into the Gabon
penalty area. Gabon defender Lloyd Palun seemed to clip him
in the box and the referee awarded a penalty that he
confidently converted. But Costa said he will maintain that the
referee was wrong.
He called upon match officials to handle matches well if the
tournament is to move on smoothly for teams to express
themselves and better teams to win. “Although we are out, I
pray that the best teams win,” he added.

Venus, Serena romp into Australian Open quarter-finals


Venus Williams overcame sixth seed Agnieszka Radwanska at
the Australian Open to reach her first Grand Slam quarter-final
since 2010.
The 34-year-old American, who suffered from Sjogren’s
syndrome, a disease that can cause fatigue, won 6-3 2-6 6-1.
The seven-time Grand Slam champion will face teenager and
fellow American Madison Keys in the last eight.
Venus will play sister, Serena, who beat Garbine Muguruza
2-6 6-3 6-2, in the semi-finals, if they both win again.
Top seed Serena, who had not advanced past the quarter-
finals at Melbourne Park since winning her last Australian
Open title in 2010, had trouble breathing at times and coughed
throughout her match against Muguruza.
She also struggled for form early on, but fought back to
avenge her defeat by the Spaniard at last year’s French Open.
“I had to play the best match of the tournament or else I was
going to be out,” said Serena, who next faces Slovakia’s
Dominika Cibulkova.
“She was just hitting winners like left and right. Every shot I
hit, she basically hit a winner on. So I had to change my
approach.”
At 19 years of Madison Keys is 15 years younger than Venus,
who won her first Grand Slam title, at Wimbledon in 2000,
when Keys was just five.
“Apparently she started playing because she watched Serena
and I,” said Venus. “She was watching me in diapers.”
Venus was pushed hard, too, losing the second set as her
level dropped before regrouping and upping the power to
clinch the decider.
Asked what had inspired her successful run in Melbourne,
Venus said: “Definitely my sister Serena, she’s just the
ultimate champion.
“And definitely a lot of inspiration from all my fans who have
stayed behind me through thick and thin.”
Venus, whose best performance at the Australian Open was a
runner-up finish in 2003, last reached the quarter-finals of a
Grand Slam at the US Open in 2010. Keys is relishing the
prospect of facing one of her childhood heroes.
“I’m just really excited. It’s a huge opportunity for me,” she
said.
“I think Venus has helped the sport, especially the women’s
side with equal prize money. She was a huge part of that.
Just watching her is inspirational.”
“She’s had her health battles but she loves tennis. She’s still
out there and she’s doing it remarkably well. I hope I can be
someone similar to that.”

Super-four: F/Eagles defender cheats death


…Enyimba not targeting trophy –Coach
…My team did not impress me –Emordi
From ROMANUS UGWU, Abuja
But for the quick intervention of the medical team at the
ongoing Super-four tournament, a Flying Eagles’ defender,
Prince Izu Omego, would have gone to the world beyond after
a sliding tackle in yesterday’s game against Kano Pillars FC.
The medical team battled for more than 10 minutes to revive
the defender, who passed out. His situation looked hopeless
at a time as many of his teammates grabbed their heads in
shock while others helped to pull- out the player’s kits off his
seeming lifeless body, leaving both the organizers and some
members of the football federation to run helter-skelter, while
men of God jumped unto the pitch for divine intervention.
However, the stadium erupted in cheers when they saw what
looked like a glimpse of body movement but he raised further
apprehension when he could not rise to his feet.
The game finally resumed when he was stretchered into a
waiting ambulance and rushed to the hospital. Although Flying
Eagles’ Chief Coach, Garba Manu, noted that he was still
awaiting update on his situation, he expressed happiness that
he finally regained consciousness.
Commenting on the game coach Manu said he was a fulfilled
man watching his boys, record victory over two-time Nigeria
Premier league champions.
According to him; “It is a sweat victory to beat back to back
Premier league champions. The good thing is that we won
and equally entertained the spectators. If we had converted
our penalty and other chances, we would have been talking
about massive victory.”
Meanwhile, the assistant coach of Enyimba FC of Aba, Friday
Christopher, has said that the preoccupation of the team is
not to lift the tournament trophy but to be match fit for their
CAF Champions League next month.
“I made it very clear after our first match that our main target
is not to win the tournament trophy. We are more concerned
about putting the players in a proper match form for our
forthcoming continental championship next month. Our joy is
that this match is an improvement from the first one,” he
noted.

The attacks on the President


dan_onwukwe@yahoo.com
NIGERIA’s political history as far as elections are
concerned,leaves no crumbs for comfort.At best,it reminds us
of how we got here. And this should surprise
nobody.Violence,thuggery and rigging are common features
that contributed in no small measure to the collapse of past
republics.In the words of Archbishop Matthew Hassan
Kukah,these are the “trinity” that have marred our electoral
process.
It’s in this connection that when the Presidential candidates in
next month’s elections signed a peace pact and embraced
each other,we all hailed it.That was why the picture of
President Goodluck Jonathan and that of the Presidential
candidate of the All Progressives Congress(APC), Muhammadu
Buhari,made the front page of many newspapers a day after
the pact was signed in Abuja.
But few weeks after,our worst fears are coming back thick and
fast.What we fear most seems to have come upon us.As bad
as our past political experience
was,one can’t recollect of any incident where an incumbent
President seeking re-election has had his convoy attacked,or
satchet water thrown at his convoy for no justifiable
reason.That’s insane.That’s the dark side of our politics that
portends danger to the forthcoming elections.
If the life of the President is threatened,who then is safe? In
less than three weeks,political thugs have attacked the
President’s campaign train in Kano,Katsina,Bauchi and
Jos,Plateau State.In the case of Bauchi,where two operatives
of the Directorate of State Security were injured and
hospitalized,stones and satchets of water were allegedly
thrown at the President’s convoy.
Who dunnit? While thugs allegedly sponsored by the
opposition APC have been fingered in the ugly incidents in
Kano,Katsina and Jos,that of Bauchi has a curious ring to
it.Was it orchestrated by APC or members of the State PDP
operating from far away Abuja as alleged by the State
Governor,Alhaji Isa Yuguda?
The Governor’s version of the attack in a British Broadcasting
Corporation(BBC)Hausa Service over the weekend sounds
bizaare and unbelievable.This is what Gov.Yuguda said on
BBC two days ago,”I am sure and let the world know that the
people who did this thing were PDP members and those
politicians in Abuja.They found these youths on the road and
gave them brooms and satchets of water and they instructed
them that when the President is passing they should raise the
brooms and satchets of water at him”.According to Yuguda,a
top member of the PDP,the target was to demonize him and
pitch him against the President.How true is this? Well,in
Nigeria,nothing is beyond our politicians.But,to me,the logic of
Alhaji Ibrahim Jalo,deputy National Publicity Secretary of PDP
makes better sense.He asks a pertinent question:How can the
ruling party be the one organising the stoning? Well,I don’t
know! He
pushed the question to the State governor to answer. That
would amount to a house divided against itself. Or better
still,an equivalent of a “Mutually Assured Destruction(MAD).
Whichever way,the attacks on the President,by all accounts,is
despicable and an affront on democracy.It also negates the
peace pact entered into by the Presidential candidates early
this month on behalf of their parties.It also raises concerns
that the elections might be a “do or die” affair.
Beyond that,it does not speak well of the maturity of aspiring
political leaders.In short,it offends all known laws meant to
bring sanity and decency into our electoral process as the
attack contravenes section 227 of the 1999 Constitution(as
amended)as well as sections 94 and 95 of the Electoral Act
and sections 5-8 of the Public Order Act and Article 3 of the
Political parties Code of Conduct freely agreed to,and adopted
by all the political parties.
Section 7 of the Code states explicitly that during
campaigns,no political party or candidate should resort to the
use of inflammatory or indecent language,provocative actions,
images or manifestations Mthat incite
violence,hatred,contempt or intimidation against another party
or candidate or any person or group of persons on grounds of
ethnicity or gender or for any other reason.
Besides,section 14 of the Code is specific that “no political
party or candidate shall prevent other parties or candidates
from pasting their posters or distributing their
leaflets ,handbills or other publicity materials in public places.
The Code therefore urges all parties and candidates to give
directives to their members or supporters not to
remove,deface or destroy the posters of other parties or
candidate.
In spite of these provisions, President Jonathan has come
under a volley of attacks.In many states,such
Rivers,Lagos,Kano,Katsina,Kaduna, Plateau ,Abuja,
Bauchi,Nasarawa,Adamawa, Borno, several acts of vandalism
have been visited on the President’s campaign train.Some of
his billboards have been reportedly destroyed and his posters
as well.
Perhaps this is a torch of provocation by the main opposition
party or even some dissidents within the President’s own
party. This is why the directive by the Inspector General of
Police,Suleiman Abba to all zonal Assistant IGP and command
commissioners to crackdown on political thugs and their
sponsors is a welcome development.The Police high
command,should,as a matter of urgency,fish out those behind
the attacks on the President’s convoy.Or will the Police high
command wait until something more sinister happens?
The President,just like any other politician,should be free to
campaign in any part of the country without any
molestation.Politicians should take responsibility for any
misconduct of their supporters.Much to their frustration,and
perhaps sensing defeat, the premeditated attacks on the
President could be a way of provoking the PDP into a
retaliation that could precipitate crisis.
Recall that the President has said many times over that his
political ambition is not worth the blood of any Nigerian.
That’s how politics ought to be.In other words,there will
always be life after politics. Therefore, if the forthcoming
elections will be counted a success,this is the time to shake
off the past and let the campaigns go on. We need not to be
reminded of how we got here.

ASUU, Oshiomhole and UNIBEN properties


The Edo State Government has been locked in a war of
attrition with the authorities of the University of Benin
(UNIBEN) over ownership of some properties located in the
Government Reservation Area of the state. The UNIBEN branch
of the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) has upped
the ante by accusing the Edo State governor, Adams
Oshiomhole, of high handedness and unprovoked attacks on
its members in his quest to take possession of the properties
in dispute.
Although a recent court judgement affirmed that the properties
rightly belong to Edo State Government, the haste and
indecorum with which the state government attempted to give
effect to the judgement is appalling. This is more so as the
university was reported to have appealed the judgement.
The Edo State authorities had mobilised bulldozers to the site
of the properties in question within days of the judgment and
pulled them down in a brazen show of power and self-help.
Students of the university, in reaction, took to the streets in
protest and destroyed at least a vehicle belonging to the state
government. They have threatened to return to the streets
again if government does not quickly meet their conditions for
peace and restore the status quo.
It is the dragging of the students into this seemingly
avoidable dispute and exposing them to harm’s way that we
decry and condemn. Parties in this dispute must realise their
responsibilities to the future generation of leaders that these
students represent and do everything humanly possible to
shield them from exposure to crisis.
If we may ask: Why was the Edo State government in such
haste to give effect to the court judgment, knowing that the
window of 90 days for an appeal had not been exhausted?
The argument that it did not receive the appeal notice before
the demolition exercise was embarked upon cannot hold
water. Neither can the earlier argument that it was UNIBEN
that initiated the court process in the first place, and should
suffer its consequence. Government, as the father of all, has a
higher responsibility to exercise utmost restraint in disputes
with its own stakeholders in order not to be seen to be
irresponsible in its actions.
This is more so when its actions cannot stand the test of
time and moral scrutiny. The mills of justice may grind slowly,
but they remain sure. The rush by the Edo authorities to take
possession of the properties was needless. Restraint, even in
the face of provocation, is the minimum expected of all
responsible governments.
Now that some damage has been done, how does government
mitigate it? This is a box government should not have found
itself in if it had thought through its action in the first place.
Government should not have resorted to the demolition of the
contentious properties, especially as they reportedly house
very senior members of staff of the university.
So, the government should as a first step towards resolving
the dispute and avoiding an escalation, take no further action
in advancing its claim to ownership of the properties in dispute
until the appeal by the university is exhausted. We are in a
democratic country where the rule of law must prevail. Let the
state government initiate peace moves and wait for the final
pronouncement of the courts on the matter.
We enjoin Governor Oshiomhole to show leadership in this
matter. The UNIBEN authorities should also explore all
avenues for an amicable handling of this dispute until the final
resolution of the matter by the courts.

Tambuwal To Politicians – Stop This Violence Now


Speaker of the House of Representatives, Aminu Tambuwal
has said that the current scale of violence introduced by
politicians in the country must stop.
He stated this at an interactive session with the leadership of
students of all tertiary institutions in Sokoto State on Monday.
“The culture of violence that is tradition. I don’t believe in
violence and those who are into it should reconsider their
steps.
“What you should do as politicians is to convince people on
what you intend to do for them. Tell them why you should be
elected. You must not lead unscrupulous people to unleash
mayhem on people you perceive as not your supporters”,
Tambuwal said.
Tambuwal, who is the All Progressive Congress (APC)
governorship candidate in the state, stressed further that it is
only when politicians imbibed the culture of electioneering that
is devoid of violence, that the youths would take a cue of
issue-based politicking.
He also pleaded with the people of Sokoto State to obtain
their Permanent Voter Cards (PVCs) because according to
him, “Obtaining PVCs is the only by which you can elect the
candidates of your choice”.
He also called on government at all levels to invest in the
youth so that the country would have vibrant future. “We
must invest in the youths for a better tomorrow because they
represent today and the future”.
Tambuwal said that his number one priority if elected as
governor of Sokoto state would be education in which majority
of beneficiaries are the youths.
( INFORMATION NIGERIA )

Tambuwal To Politicians – Stop This Violence Now


Speaker of the House of Representatives, Aminu Tambuwal
has said that the current scale of violence introduced by
politicians in the country must stop.
He stated this at an interactive session with the leadership of
students of all tertiary institutions in Sokoto State on Monday.
“The culture of violence that is tradition. I don’t believe in
violence and those who are into it should reconsider their
steps.
“What you should do as politicians is to convince people on
what you intend to do for them. Tell them why you should be
elected. You must not lead unscrupulous people to unleash
mayhem on people you perceive as not your supporters”,
Tambuwal said.
Tambuwal, who is the All Progressive Congress (APC)
governorship candidate in the state, stressed further that it is
only when politicians imbibed the culture of electioneering that
is devoid of violence, that the youths would take a cue of
issue-based politicking.
He also pleaded with the people of Sokoto State to obtain
their Permanent Voter Cards (PVCs) because according to
him, “Obtaining PVCs is the only by which you can elect the
candidates of your choice”.
He also called on government at all levels to invest in the
youth so that the country would have vibrant future. “We
must invest in the youths for a better tomorrow because they
represent today and the future”.
Tambuwal said that his number one priority if elected as
governor of Sokoto state would be education in which majority
of beneficiaries are the youths.
( INFORMATION NIGERIA )