Archive for nigeriang

Thunder Bolt returns to China

Thunder Bolt returns to China

Usain Bolt returns
to China, the scene of his Beijing 2008 break out, seeking to establish
a further mark as the leading sprinter on the planet.

After destroying
the field and breaking records aplenty, the Jamaican might be forgiven
for taking it easy, but that is not his plans. There are many
established sprinters like Tyson Gay and Asafa Powell who are itching
to be the first to beat the world record holder, as well as some
younger runners who have a thirst for his scalp.

He obviously
enjoyed the attention as he luxuriated in it on his return to China on
Friday, accompanied by former champion in the 110m hurdles, Liu Xiang,
who is trying to resuscitate his athletics career.

Bolt said at the
meeting: “I am loving it; this is where I burst out. I really enjoy the
crowd here; there is a lot of support.” Bolt won the 100 and 200 meters
gold at the Beijing Olympics in world record time and will start his
grand prix season officially in Shanghai. He will run in the 200m on
Sunday in the Diamond League’s second meet of the season.

At the press
conference, he was regaled by a first meeting with the Chinese
sprinter, which left Bolt giggling. The pair was asked if they could
remember when they first met, and Xiang recalled the 2005 World
Championships in Helsinki where he watched Bolt limp off the track
injured.

Setting new records

On Wednesday, Bolt
clocked a time of 9.86 seconds in Daegu, South Korea, easily defeating
compatriot, Michael Frater, with a time that was 0.28 slower than his
world record of 9.58s.

But he was still
sprightly after the race, saying he knows he will be beaten one day. “I
have said it before, I can be beaten. I really work hard not to be,” he
said, adding that a defeat could even make the sport more interesting.
“I take everybody seriously as long as you are in the lane beside me.”
Asked if he will be trying to break the 200m record, Bolt said: “I
don’t know how close I can get. I’ll try to run hard to execute, as I
always am keen to give my fans a good show. That’s always my aim,” he
concluded.

Bolt will be
running only the 200m in China. “I do enjoy going out and doing the
200m. I’ve heard good things about this track, I’ve been told it’s very
good, so if it is as good as they say, it should be a good time. I’m
just looking forward to going out there, and executing and coming out
injury free.”

Having started the
season like he ended the last one, he is just happy to be fresh and fit
for the outdoor season. “I’m definitely proud the way I’ve started out
my season in both events,” he said, though he conceded he still has
areas in his racing technique that have to be fine-tuned.

All that his competitors can pray for is to catch the record holder on his off day in Daegu today.

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Highpoints of MRS Scans

Highpoints of MRS Scans

>> 1977- The first MRI scan was performed on a human being in the United States of America.

>> 1989- Two-year ban clamped on
Nigeria, following alterations to the ages of three players at the 1988
Olympics in South Korea. The players – Dahiru Sadi, Andrew Uwe and
Samson Siasia – had previously represented Nigeria at U-20 level.

>> 2002- The Asian Football
Confederation (AFC) bans 16 players from four countries – Oman, Iran,
Bangladesh and Thailand – for fielding over aged players at the 2000
AFC U-16 Championship. An additional eight players from Pakistan and
four from Yemen are also banned at the end of the 2002 tournament.

>> 2003- CAF bans Kenya after
fielding players who were over the age of 20 for an African Youth
Championship qualifier. The secretary of the Kenyan FA, Hussein Swaleh
was banned for three years after the players insisted FA officials were
aware of their real ages and had played a role in falsifying their age
documents.

>> 2008- North Korea, Tajikistan
and Iraq lose their spots in the 2008 AFC U-16 Championship despite
making it from the qualifiers after fielding over aged players.

>> 2008- Niger gets kicked out of
Nigeria 2009 after fielding a 22-year-old player at the qualifying
tournament in Algeria, with their place taken by Malawi who went on to
make their debut at a FIFA tournament.

>> 2009- Yemen’s qualification
for Nigeria 2009 is annulled by the AFC after an MRI scan on one of
their players, Wesam Saleh Ahmed Al Worafi, revealed he was over 16
years old.

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SPORT PUNCHES: Is Bio’s situation any different?

SPORT PUNCHES: Is Bio’s situation any different?

The answer to the
above question is no, judging by the structures Bio, the sports
minister and chairman of the National Sports Commission (NSC), has
found himself with.

There is absolutely
no wisdom in pouring pure water into a dirty container and expect human
beings to consume such. It is criminal. Just as it is useless talking
to a wall, there is no sense in proposing fresh, proactive,
life-changing and intelligent ideas, to “demi-semi” illiterates, who
are visionless, inept and morally bankrupt – to say the least.

The truth,
therefore, is that Bio has no business doing business with majority of
those with him in the NSC, the Nigeria Football Federation (NFF) and
the sports ministry. They must be thrown “over-board”, or advised to
resign honourably. Bio must not be allowed to swim with sharks.

Reports reaching us
from Abuja, confirm that the cool-headed, calm, media shy, but very
astute ex Federal Transport Minister, is already being perceived as an
enigma, within the sporting fraternity.

Even union leaders,
bear testimonies of his effectiveness while he was at the transport
ministry. We are made to understand that he still rides his personal
cars and goes about his duties without the usual fanfare exhibited by
his predecessors.

So, is this the
“messiah” we have been praying for? Is this the God-sent fellow to
rescue Nigerian sports? Well, only God has that answer for now, and of
course, time will tell.

The fact is that
truth is bitter, and in most cases very repulsive. Most human beings
hate it and would rather listen to and accept that which is not true.

For instance, as a
fanatic and apostle of grass roots sports development, I absolutely
agree with Bio, that he would focus, vigorously, on sports development.
Minister, you have an ally here. An organism or organization that does
not continue growing or that has stopped growing will eventually die.
No more, no less.

If this were to be
true of Nigerian sports, and of course it is true, if we are not to
continue deceiving ourselves, then, football, which is my area of
interest and specialization is “dead” in this great nation of ours. And
this is very pathetic. Did I hear you say, “but it is said that we have
the best league in Africa?” Whoever said that should not only be
sanctioned, but remanded somewhere. Why?

Last week
Wednesday, 12th of May 2010, marked 20 years of professional league
football in Nigeria. The statute that established the Football
Association to administer the league, stipulated that all the football
teams registering to partake in the league had seven years within which
to be transformed into football clubs, with all the required
paraphernalia like a club house, formation of other sports teams like
basket ball, tennis, etc as part of the club; formation of functional
Board of Trustees and so on and so forth. But alas, what do we have
today?

A crawling twenty- year old

Check very well and
you will discover the travesty, the bankruptcy we find ourselves in as
a nation. Can you imagine a twenty year old still crawling? That is the
state of the Nigerian football league.

So, one is tempted
to ask what all those who had been through the glass house in Abuja did
while there? I believe Nigerians deserve an explanation. What can
people like Taiwo Ogunjobi, Patrick Ekeji, Sani Lulu and Bolaji Ojo
Oba, and of course the big masquerade himself, the untouchable sacred
cow of Nigerian sports-the one and only Amos Adamu, say about this?
Nigerians deserve to know.

Kudos must however
be given to Adegboye Onigbinde for the efforts he made to transform
IICC Shooting Stars to 3SC. The whole idea then was to establish a
truly functional sports club. But some “alamala” politicians (apologies
to Kojo Williams), would not let him.

Are these the same set of people Nigerians will allow Bio to have around him?

By the way, I
whole-heartedly welcome the idea of the forthcoming National Sports
Summit. I believe and pray that several issues will be dealt with and
Nigerians will be able to decide how sports should be administered in
this great nation.

Let me warn once
again, Bio please tread softly. Watch out for the “banana peels.” May
the God of grace be gracious unto you, and may He rescue Nigerian
sports from the grips of the enemies of this massively blessed nation,
Amen.

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Maiduguri’s ‘Drogba’ and other issues

Maiduguri’s ‘Drogba’ and other issues

The football season
has come to a close around Europe, save for the Champions League final,
which comes up tomorrow. We won’t waste precious column space talking
about the finales and if that has anything to do with a certain London
club winning the English Premier League crown, then I stand guilty as
charged. One can only imagine the words that would have flowed on this
page had Manchester United retained the premiership for an
unprecedented fourth time. Unfortunately, it wasn’t to be.

One measly point separated the two sides and condemned all Manchester United supporters to a year of taunts from Blues fans.

The other Drogba

Some of this
sentiment must have contributed to the reported clash between some fans
in Maiduguri after the last games in the English Premier League. The
first emotion upon reading the article was astonishment – thousands of
miles away from the actual action, there was such high feelings as to
cause a violent disagreement! It’s not the first time this has
happened. We’ve heard of or read stories of stabbings, street scuffles
and arguments among rival supporters of European clubs. But it never
ceases to amaze. Of the two men injured in the Maiduguri conflict, one
was nicknamed Drogba. While his more famous namesake was scoring a hat
trick, he was being carted off to a clinic. Again and again, there is
proof of the worldwide appeal of the English Premier League. The
implication of this popularity is that fewer and fewer Nigerian
football enthusiasts identify with teams in our local leagues.

In a very
unscientific survey I conducted recently, I asked some football fans to
name five teams in the Nigerian League and not one could come up with
the correct answer. Yet our Nigerian Drogba feels the need to engage in
a largely meaningless scuffle with a Manchester United supporter. While
I’m not saying that there should be a clash between fans of Enyimba and
Bayelsa United, it would certainly be heart-warming to see some kind of
positive emotion associated with the local league. I repeat, I am not
advocating that Nigerian soccer fans should start widespread fighting
and stabbing in the name of supporting the Nigerian League.

Let it not be said
that I am a promoter of violence. It would be nice to see the Nigerian
League hold the same appeal as foreign leagues.

Solaja’s timely intervention

Moving away from
Maiduguri’s Drogba and his kind, I’d say it was uplifting to hear about
Kunle Solaja’s book launch. The book, “Super Eagles through the Ages,”
gives a historical record of the national football team from 1949.
There is such a paucity of information about sports in the country that
any publication aiming to fill this gap must be lauded. It is
noteworthy that the publication came from an individual and not from
the Nigerian Football Federation.

Can we say they
have made up for it in a little way by attending the launch and
purchasing numerous copies of the book? Commendable, no doubt but they
need to build on this and actually spearhead such initiatives. The NFF
ought to sponsor more efforts such as these, as opposed to relying on
the private sector and a few committed individuals.

There’s no reason
why we shouldn’t, for example, have a football museum. Not only could
entrance fees and sales of memorabilia generate revenue, but museums
also naturally serve as resource and education centres. Up to date
websites could provide much needed instant information for the general
public. And it shouldn’t stop at football.

The importance of keeping records cannot be overemphasized. It is
our responsibility to ensure that the next generation does not forget.
Only then can we have Maiduguri Odegbamis and Lokoja Okochas instead of
the Drogbas of Maiduguri.

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Bravo Barca and Inter!

Bravo Barca and Inter!

Sunday saw Barcelona and Internazionale crowned champions of
Spain and Italy respectively; in my view, both clubs were worthy winners of
their league titles.

Let’s start with Barça. After a historic 2008/09 season which
saw them win an unprecedented six trophies, it was inevitable this year would
be a letdown. There would be no way Pep Guardiola could inspire his group of
players to do it all again. However, their surprising defeat in the Copa del
Rey aside, the Blaugrana actually came close to another impressive trophy haul.

They narrowly lost to Inter in the Champions League semi-finals
and made sure they would not end the season empty handed by winning La Liga on
the final day with a record points total.

At the centre of their latest contest was a duo that has to rate
as one of the best of all-time; Xavi Hernandez and Leo Messi. These two players
have an understanding which led to a large percentage of the goals netted by
Barcelona this season.

The Spanish midfielder finished the season as the king of
assists, and what can be said about Leo? Wow! 46 goals in all competitions this
season, and he is not even an out-and-out striker. Simply incredible.

I will express my sympathy for Real Madrid manager Manuel
Pellegrini. His team set new marks for points and goals scored but the
Merengues finished the season empty-handed. Even with Cristiano Ronaldo at his
best, they could not overtake Barcelona on the final stretch in the race for
the league title. The “Chilean Engineer,” as he is known, will now have to find
a new job as Jose Mourinho is expected to waltz into the Santiago Bernabeu
before the start of the new campaign.

Which leads me to Internazionale. They were the best team in
Italy this season and were worthy champions. For the good of Italian football,
I would have liked Roma to win, since it isn’t healthy for one team to claim
five straight titles.

However, the Nerazzuri were better, faster, and stronger, and
deserve to celebrate another Scudetto. Diego Milito was simply outstanding in
the last month of the season and it is fitting that he has been selected by
Diego Maradona to represent Argentina at the World Cup. Inter’s other top
performers like Walter Samuel, Lucio, and Wesley Sneijder will be there. They
will go to South Africa as treble winners since I believe Inter will beat
Bayern Munich in the Champions League final in Madrid.

As far as Jose Mourinho is concerned, he has proven once more
that in the present day he is the best coach on the planet. Give him the
resources, and he will give you success. Guaranteed. He now has collected 16
trophies in 10 years in management. Statistics like these do not lie.

One final word about England’s FA Cup final. I grew up watching
these games on television and always considered them to be a showpiece of the
football season. Having watched this last weekend’s match between Chelsea and
Portsmouth from afar once more, I became disillusioned with everything this
game is supposed to represent.

There were empty seats, the fans were lethargic, and the pitch
was embarrassingly poor. It didn’t look like the home of football. It didn’t
even look like a field that should host a final of any sort.

CNN Sport correspondent
Pedro Pinto will anchor CNN International’s coverage of the FIFA World Cup in
South Africa.

He wrtes for NEXT every Monday

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RED CARD:Ending strife in Nigerian rugby

RED CARD:Ending strife in Nigerian rugby

The game of rugby
in Nigeria has come a long way. It has made some progress from the
period when little was known about it to the present where it has a
thriving league and has become part of the National Sports Festival.

Looking at what is
happening now, it is difficult to imagine that just under ten years
ago, the vast majority of Nigerian sports fans hadn’t the faintest idea
what the game was all about. This was due principally to the fact that
even though the game had been in existence in the country for more than
two decades, it had not been given the decisive push that would make it
visible enough to attract the attention of the public.

The efforts of
individuals like Ntiense Williams, Kayode Oguntayo and Kelechi Mbagwu
have been instrumental in giving the sport a new lease of life. Their
decision, a few years ago to come together under the auspices of the
‘Friends of Rugby’ to transform the sport, proved pivotal in attracting
the interest of young men and women who now fancy the game.

Concessioning trouble

Sadly, these modest
gains are in danger of being eroded. The ‘Friends of Rugby’ has
splintered with Oguntayo and his associates in the Racing Club pulling
away leaving Mbagwu and Williams to continue with the original idea.
Oguntayo and associates now run the Nigeria Rugby Football Federation
(NRFF) courtesy of the concessioning of the sport by the National
Sports Commission (NSC) last year.

That concessioning,
done with the aim of further improving the lot of the game, is proving
to be a double-edged sword. While it has managed to sweep away the
ineffectual board of the federation and the incompetent secretariat
whose ineptitude stank to high heavens and put in place individuals
with sufficient knowledge of the game, passion and administrative
acumen, it has caused acrimony within the rugby family.

Matters have been
made worse by the ban on Nigeria’s participation in international rugby
tournaments by the International Rugby Board following Friends of
Rugby’s protest of the process that threw up Racing Club as winners of
the concessioning move.

It is not
encouraging that the men who have the will and resources to engineer a
revolution of the sport are at each other’s throats. I have known
Williams for years and can vouch for his passion for rugby. That
Nigerian journalists have come to embrace the sport and give it more
coverage is the result of his persistence. Mbagwu for his part has
spent his personal funds to ensure that the game does not die. So has
Oguntayo.

Indeed, my first
encounter with Oguntayo and his team inspired me to think that perhaps
in the hands of these young men rugby would be safe in Nigeria. Their
awareness of issues pertaining to the sport and their technological and
organisational savvy were a welcome departure from the drab and
mediocre world of past rugby federations, to whom planning and
organisation proved to be rocket science.

Calling truce

We must move
forward. In the interest of the sport, truce must be called. The
warring parties must bury their egos and work together for the
development of the game. There is too much at stake for us to allow the
present scenario to continue to play itself out.

One of the reasons
the IRB slammed a ban on Nigeria was because it was not too convinced
that the process that brought the present board into being was wholly
transparent.

The present
leadership of the NSC should find a way to work out an arrangement that
sees the estranged comrades close ranks and take Nigerian rugby to the
level. New Sports Minister, Ibrahim Bio, has shown, in the few weeks
that he has been in office, that he is not wanting in either courage or
vision. A united rugby family will bring a breath of fresh air to the
scene and encourage former and present Nigerian rugby players in the
Diaspora, to explore ways in which they can form a synergy with their
brothers at home to propel the game forward.

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Experts blame Africa’s poverty on research deficiencies

Experts blame Africa’s poverty on research deficiencies

Research is one of the core functions of higher education and can determine the reputation of a university.

Hence government,
policy makers and donor agencies are concerned with the quality and
impact that research from the institutions has on society. This is
because research and innovation have been acknowledged as critical
factors for fuelling long-term sustainable economic growth, generating
employment, and alleviating poverty.

However, recently,
the issue of research uptake has become very contentious as
governments, communities and industries for whom research has been
undertaken to address their needs prefer to have nothing to do with it.

One reason for
this, according to a lecturer at the University of Jos in Nigeria,
Jonah Akpa, may be the issue of who determines the priorities before
the researchers go to work.

Communities,
governments and industries have their priorities, which do not always
align with a funding organisation’s desire for investing in a research
project.

“Researchers in the
ivory towers look for grants to undertake research that will not only
enhance their financial status but also earn them a promotion,” Mr Akpa
said. “But regrettably, most governments in Africa don’t fund research
even though they have the greatest need for it.”

Other reasons for
the seeming disconnect between town and gown is the inability of
researchers to communicate their research to governments and the
communities effectively, the absence of relationships between
researchers and the media, research undertaken mainly for purposes of
promotion, or dubious study samples utilised as part of the research.

Michael Ranson and
Sarah Bennett at The Alliance for Health Policy and System Research,
which is part of the World Health Organisation, said in a recent
publication that donor funding for health-system-financing research is
inadequate and often poorly aligned with national priorities.

This position is
supported by Goski Alabi of the Institute of Professional Studies in
Ghana, who says it is important that research aligns with the
priorities of national, community, university, and funding
organisations to ensure that the results of such research are not
shelved.

“Today, most
research is undertaken not because it is targeted at addressing a
problem but because there is available funding,” she said. “So, it is
important we have a change of mindset about what research is supposed
to be and should result to.” The African deficit Bassirou Bonfoh of the
Swiss Centre for Scientific Research in Abidjan, Cote d’Ivoire, says no
country can develop without investing heavily in science and
technology. Mr Bonfoh also said scientific research is instrumental in
determining the rank of national economies.

“Unfortunately,
most research is still funded by external funds and African governments
still fail to use at least one per cent of their gross domestic product
to support research as stipulated by the African Union. Africa cannot
wait exclusively for outside solutions and funds to the problems faced
by the continent,” Mr Bonfoh said.

The position of
African governments, according to Ogoh Alubo of the African Population
and Health Research Center in Kenya, is informed by the lack of
partnership between the policymakers and the researchers. “There is
little evidence to show that policies in Africa are research-driven,”
Alubo says.

The position of
African governments has caused sleepless nights for funding agencies
and this has led to the several workshops to evaluate and advise on how
donors can get governments, communities and industries to develop
interest in the research they are funding.

Abel Olorunnisola
of the University of Ibadan said it remains a surprise that, in spite
of the huge investment in engineering education in Nigeria, the country
is still grappling with a myriad of engineering challenges. “While the
challenges exist, much of the research output from the universities
lies fallow on laboratory shelves,” he said.

In 2009, the UK’s
Department For International Development (DFID) convened a meeting of
experts across the African continent in Ghana to discuss the issue. One
of the findings was that research was not being prioritized. The group
also acknowledged that there has been weak flow of communication
between the media and researchers, and researchers and governments,
resulting in each group working in isolation and with a lack of access
to relevant and timely information.

The International
Development Research Centre (IDRC), a public entity created by the
Canadian government to aid researchers in the developing world, is
convinced that the creation of new knowledge remains vitally important
to humanity’s ability to grapple with challenges.

Linking research to need

Wallace Udoh, with
the Nigerian ministry of Works and Housing, believes, however, that the
application of the IDRC mandate has been limited to universities and
research institutes.

“There is no way
you will be able to affect or enhance the development of developing
countries without aligning your priorities with that of the government
of the day. Otherwise you are only interested in undertaking academic
exercises whose outcome is of no use to society,” Mr Udoh said.

At the recent
INORMS 2010 Congress, a meeting of research managers from around the
world that was held in Cape Town, South Africa where the issue of
research uptake came to the fore, the conference participants stressed
the need to align research funding organisation’s priority with that of
the applicable government, universities, and society for maximum impact.

South Africa’s
Minister for Science and Technology, Naledi Pandor, said it was a
government’s obligation and duty to invest in fundamental research.

“Business cannot do
that. Business has to rely on governments to educate scientists and
technologists; innovation depends on an educated workforce and to
maintain the basic infrastructure of research at universities and
research institutes,” she said.

“It is governments who have to look to the long term and invest in basic research.” she says.

Ms Pandor also said
governments must lay down policies and standards that will promote
research and innovation, adding that such innovations must be to social
and economic benefits. Chris Nhlapo of the Cape Peninsula University of
Technology in South Africa, agreed that research must align with the
economic activities of the region in which it operates.

“University
research policy and strategy must align with national policies and
strategies because society wants research to result in beneficial and
measurable impact,” he said.

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ABUJA HEARTBEAT: Letter from my heart to Rotimi Amaechi

ABUJA HEARTBEAT: Letter from my heart to Rotimi Amaechi

I grew up as a
teenager, in the streets of Benin City, opposite the famous New Benin
Market and ‘Regent Cinema’ where the notorious Anini had his enclave.
There, it was purely the survival of the toughest and craftiest – or so
we thought, until the God factor became clear.

Well, I survived,
despite the daily troubles and fights, especially when we had to fetch
water from those public taps where iron buckets were used freely like
in WWF – World Wrestling Federation. I had an uncle who nicknamed me
‘fighter’ because every time he entered my father’s house, he found me
by the corner kneeling down, with my eyes shut, and usually, he would
be told that I was involved in a street fight. How I managed to escape
without serious bodily harms I have now discovered to be God’s love for
innocent and ignorant children.

My story, however
is about adults. I told everybody at that time that I would rather have
internal ailment than have bodily injury that would live a scar on my
skin. Now I know better, having found out that inside our body resides
the most delicate organs. So, when I trace the history of Nigeria in
the last fifty years, I have found out that many of our leaders have
always travelled outside the shores of this nation to take care of
their failing health in the area of the heart, liver, or kidney.

The question then
arises, why have all these leaders who have continuously recycled
themselves or their children not been able to build an ultra modern
hospital that will take care of these organs effectively?

All fingers point
in one direction. This happens to be the last card in our quest for a
corrupt-free society and it is also the joker in the pack of cards, for
our acquire-all looters in the corridor of our nation’s power. A lot of
comedians have joked about most governors and even some past presidents
concentrating their efforts in refurbishing or making our prison houses
more comfortable. But to their bewilderment, according to the jokes, if
you refurbish Kuje Prison, when you are out of office, the new helmsman
may decide to send you to Gasua Prison, where the sun’s heat has never
been known to be merciful. But again, a leader who is sympathetic could
keep you in Kuje Prison in Abuja, where most political prisoners live
better than most of us outside.

Not so smart heart

It is, therefore,
very credible that these gang of leaders have refused to build a
hospital good enough because it will not support their evil ploy of
looting and bleeding the nation. As has been found out, even our
courts, after the usual de-briefing from the brief case of these
international thieves, grant that “the accused be allowed overseas
travel for medical care, for a failing heart, liver, or kidney.” If our
politicians and their cohorts know that once they are caught in the web
of fraud and corruption, they will receive full treatment right here in
Nigeria, there will be some kind of rethink to this whole disease of
kleptomania. It is strange that their heart that was strong enough to
steal but not strong enough to face the music, and the same heart would
always fail them before or during trial.

Unfortunately, President Umaru Yar’Adua (may his gentle soul rest in peace), died from heart and kidney related diseases.

Perhaps, if he was
able to get treatment for these obviously terminal ailments here in
Nigeria, the time spent in transporting him abroad could have been used
to stabilise and accord the sickness proper and more effective care
and, most importantly, the craft and chicanery of the cabal would have
been made more difficult, if not impossible.

When I saw Rotimi
Ameachi of River State on television, speaking about the new Port
Harcourt City his administration is building, and the international
standard hospital he has budgeted for in that garden city, I could not
help but say a Daniel has come to judgement. But your Excellency sir,
is our new modern hospital going to be able to treat effectively and
perfectly the very elusive problems of the liver, kidney, and heart?

For a popular musician once sang “…can’t always trust it no, the
heart is not so smart, goes where it should not go, the heart is not so
smart”.

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Many unanswered questions from the Okigbo Report

Many unanswered questions from the Okigbo Report

The chickens are
coming to roost. The Minister of Justice and Attorney-General of the
Federation, Mohammed Bello Adoke (SAN), the Federal Government will be
setting up a committee that will determine the authenticity of the Pius
Okigbo Panel report, review the allegations and recommendations with a
view to ascertaining whether the allegations can sustain a criminal
charge against former military president, Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida on
the abuse of government funds during his time in power.

A coalition of
civil society organisations had, on May 5, 2010 made real its promise
to dust and produce the certified true copy (CTC) of the report long
submitted by the Pius Okigbo Panel and alleged to be missing, after the
Justice Minister requested for the original copy in his reply to
group’s earlier petition.

Mr. Adoke received
the group’s couriered document last week after his return from Cape
Verde. Speaking with NEXT on Sunday, two of Mr. Adoke’s aides: the
Special Assistant on Media and Special Duties, Onyema Omenuwa and the
Chief Press Secretary, Ambrose Momoh said they could not as at now
state any specific action the government will take on the report.

Pick up a copy of NEXT on Sunday newspaper for details.

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The Abuja bazaar

The Abuja bazaar

Three notable cases best epitomise
how Aliyu Modibbo, as the Minister of the Federal Capital Territory,
Abuja, made a mockery of the Abuja master plan and entrenched lack of
due diligence as standard operating practice in land management.

The cases are the purchase of
4million square metres of land by Sunrise Estate Development, Houses
For Africa Development Ltd and Harmony Properties Development all in
Abuja.

Shady dealings

On Tuesday, January 22, 2008, at
the office of the minister of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), in
Area 11, Garki, Abuja, Mr. Modibbo, then FCT minister, met with
officials of a fictitious company with the grandiose name of Houses For
Africa Development Ltd.

Pick up a copy of NEXT on Sunday newspaper for details.

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