Tag: Christmas

  • Nigerian pastor blows hot, prays death on person who stole his Christmas fowl (video)

    Nigerian pastor blows hot, prays death on person who stole his Christmas fowl (video)

    A yet to be identified Nigerian pastor has gone viral after taking to the street to pray death on the person who stole his Christmas fowl.

    In the video that surfaced on social media, the cleric could be seen with a  megaphone, expressing his frustration after a chicken he received that costs N30,000 was stolen from his house.

    In anger, cleric prayed that the person who stole his chicken will die for causing him pain.

    The video has left many social media users reeling in laughter.

    Watch video below;

     

  • Christmas: Senator Dafinone calls for unity, hope, resilience in Urhobo nation

    Christmas: Senator Dafinone calls for unity, hope, resilience in Urhobo nation

    The Senator representing the good people of Delta Central Senatorial District, Senator Ede Dafinone, has called on the Urhobo People, Deltans to reflect on the blessings of the year 2024, to embrace hope, and to renew our commitment to love, peace, and unity.

    He also called on Nigerians to continue to pray and support President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s administration to succeed, noting that the administration came into power when Nigeria was at a crossroads and will, therefore, need our collective efforts and support for the country to bounce back to its glorious days.

    The Delta Central lawmaker, in a signed statement, also urges prayers particularly for the people of Okuama over the tragic incident, which has left the community deserted and its people still suffering from the traumatic experience which has left a deep scar on the Urhobo nation.

    The statement reads: “As we celebrate the joyous season of Christmas, I, Senator Ede Dafinone, representing the good people of Delta Central Senatorial District, extend my heartfelt greetings and best wishes to the Urhobo Nation and all Deltans. Christmas is a time to reflect on the blessings of the year, to embrace hope, and to renew our commitment to love, peace, and unity. May this festive season bring joy, warmth, and renewed strength to every home across Delta State.

    “As we celebrate, let us remember the challenges we faced in 2024, particularly the unfortunate Okuama incident that left a scar on the heart of the Urhobo Nation. It was indeed a trying year for us, but through our resilience, unity, and unwavering faith, we continue to emerge stronger. Let us use this season to seek peace, extend forgiveness, and renew our resolve to build a more united and prosperous Urhobo Nation.

    “I also urge us to use this season as an opportunity to offer prayers for the success of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s administration. His leadership comes at a critical time in our nation’s history, and with our collective support and prayers, we can witness the realization of his vision for a stronger, more prosperous Nigeria. We must also pray for our leaders in Delta State and across the nation to have the wisdom and courage to make decisions that uplift the people.

    “To the Urhobo people, I reiterate my commitment to your welfare and development. Together, we will strive to overcome challenges and secure opportunities that ensure a brighter future for our children and the generations to come. Let this Christmas rekindle our shared values of hard work, unity, and dedication to the common good of our beloved Urhobo Nation.

    “As we celebrate with family and friends, let us do so responsibly, remembering those who may not have as much to celebrate. I encourage everyone to reach out with acts of kindness and generosity to those in need, sharing the love and light that define this season. May the peace, joy, and hope of Christmas remain with us now and always. Merry Christmas and a prosperous New Year to all!

  • CHRISTMAS: Oborevwori urges Nigerians to prioritise national interest

    CHRISTMAS: Oborevwori urges Nigerians to prioritise national interest

    Delta State Governor, Hon. Sheriff Oborevwori, has called on Nigerians to use the season of joy and goodwill typified by the Christian Festival of Christmas, to reflect on the values of unity, peace and selflessness to work for the sustainable progress and development of the country.

    Governor Oborevwori made the call while speaking to journalists after the Christmas service at the Living Faith Church, Asaba, on Wednesday.

    The governor, who was joined at the Christmas service by his wife, Deaconess Tobore Oborevwori, and other family members, emphasized the need for citizens to place national interest above personal or sectional aspirations in order to foster sustainable progress and stability in the country.

    Governor Oborevwori reminded Nigerians that the essence of Christmas laid in mutual selfless love, sacrifice, and the spirit of giving, as exemplified by the birth of Jesus Christ, and urged citizens to emulate the virtues in their daily lives, particularly during these challenging times.

    He said: “I am very happy to celebrate this Christmas in Asaba. I don’t know if am the first Governor to do that. But last year, I celebrated the Christmas in my village and I said this year I will be celebrating it here in Asaba. Here is the capital and I need to celebrate it will all of you.

    “I am happy to be here in this Christmas service. I want to assure Deltans that throughout this celebration, there shall be peace everywhere and I thank them for all the support they have given to this administration.

    “I know that these are trying times, but I believe that 2025 shall be better than this year in Jesus’ name.

    “I also know that there is crisis everywhere in the world but we are managing ours very well in Nigeria.

    “The most important thing is that we are united and I believe that the major interest should be Nigeria, not personal interest.

    “A lot of things have happened in the last few days. There is no where people don’t make mistakes. Where we have stampedes, we commiserate with them and their families over the losses. I pray to God to grant them the fortitude to bear the losses.

    “Like I have said, 2025 will be a good year. It will be a year of consolidation and I pray for more unity in Delta State and in Nigeria in general.”

    Earlier in his Christmas message titled “Understanding the purpose of the coming of Christ”, Pastor Samuel Johns of Living Faith Church, Asaba, said Christmas was all about the celebration of salvation, adding that Christ came to save mankind from their sins.

    The cleric said Christ came to open a new chapter for human race, to experience a new beginning, restore joy to mankind, bring peace to humanity and restore divine presence to man.

    He added that “Christ came to give us life at its best, to destroy the works of the devil, to restore the supernatural back to mankind and to give Christians what is due them”.

    Pastor Johns also said for Christians to access the blessings of the coming of Christ, they must accept and believe Him as their Lord and personal Saviour, believe in the provisions of redemption and engage in the obedience of faith to His word.

  • BREAKING: 42 feared dead, 14 hospitalised in Christmas Day horror plane crash

    BREAKING: 42 feared dead, 14 hospitalised in Christmas Day horror plane crash

    A Christmas Day horror Azerbaijan Airlines plane crash in Kazakhstan has left 42 feared dead and 14 hospitalised.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports the Azerbaijan Airlines plane with flight number J2-8243 crashed near Aktau Airport in Kazakhstan.

    It was gathered that the plane is an Embraer ERJ-190 with registration 4K-AZ65.

    According to Flight Radar, the aircraft took off from Baku at 03:55 UTC time and was flying to Grozny.

    “The aircraft was exposed to strong GPS jamming which made the aircraft transmit bad ADS-B data.

    “At 04:40 UTC we lost the ADS-B signal. At 06:07 UTC we picked up the ADS-B signal again before it crashed at 06:28 UTC,” Flight Radar disclosed.

    A video is currently trending on social media that shows the moment the plane losing altitude and making a rapid descent before it crashed and burst into flames.

    TNG reports the Azerbaijan Airlines plane, that crashed near the city of Aktau in Kazakhstan on Wednesday, had 67 passengers onboard and was flying from Baku to Grozny in Russia’s Chechnya.

    The plane had reportedly requested an emergency landing before the incident.

    The flight was carrying 67 passengers onboard, including five crew members.

    According to reports, the plane was flying from Baku to Grozny in Russia’s Chechnya.

    However, it was re-routed due to a fog in Grozny.

    “A plane doing the Baku-Grozny route crashed near the city of Aktau. It belongs to Azerbaijan Airlines,” the Kazakh transport ministry said.

    Kazakhstan’s emergency ministry says 42 people have likely died in the Azerbaijan Airlines’ plane crash, news agency AP reported.

    Preliminary data shows 25 people have survived the crash, according to news agency Reuters which cited Kazakh authorities.

    Fourteen survivors of the Azerbaijan Airlines crash in western Kazakhstan have been hospitalised, news agency AFP reported, citing local health officials.

    “At the moment, 14 survivors have been taken to the regional hospital, including five in intensive care,” the report cited the health ministry’s regional department as having said in a statement.

  • Gov Fubara doles out Christmas largesse to Rivers workers

    Gov Fubara doles out Christmas largesse to Rivers workers

    Rivers State Governor Siminalayi Fubara in the spirit of the yuletide has approved the sum of N100,000 for civil servants, public servants and pensioners in Rivers State.

    This Governor Fubara said is to enable the civil servants, public servants and pensioners in the State. have a fulfilled Christmas celebration.

    According to a statement by George Nwaeke, Head of Civil Service, Rivers State, the 2024 Christmas bonus will go to workers in the different Ministries, Departments, And Agencies as well as the pensioners both in the civil and public service.

    The statement reads: “I wish to inform the general public that the Rivers State Governor, His Excellency Sir Siminalayi Fubara, GSSRS in the spirit of the yuletide has approved the sum of N100,000 for civil servants, public servants and pensioners in Rivers State, to enable them have a fulfilled Christmas celebration.

    “The 2024 Christmas bonus will go to workers in the different Ministries, Departments, And Agencies as well as the pensioners both in the civil and public service.

    “His Excellency who gave this approval on Monday 23rd of December 2024, has directed its immediate implementation to enable the civil servants have a wonderful yuletide celebration.

    “I wish to state that this is the second time within the administration of his Excellency  Governor Siminalayi Fubara that civil servants in the state will be receiving Christmas bonuses, to the tune of one hundred thousand naira, an amount which is above the value of the nation’s minimum wage, and the first time that pensioners are being included.

    “The one hundred thousand Naira Christmas bonus for Both Civil and public servants as well as pensioners is part of Governor Fubara’s “Rivers First mantra” aimed at securing the well-being and happiness of Rivers people across the various sectors of the economy”.

    Gov Fubara preaches peace, unity, development at Christmas

    Meanwhile, Governor Fubara has extended warm Christmas greetings to the people of the State and Nigerians, urging them to embrace peace, unity, and love during the festive season and beyond.

    In his Christmas message delivered at Government House, Port Harcourt, on Tuesday, Governor Fubara congratulated Christians in Rivers State and across the nation as they join the global community in celebrating the birth of Jesus Christ.

    He called on citizens to use the occasion for deep reflection, prayer, and commitment to building a more peaceful, united, and progressive society.

    “On behalf of my family, the government, and the people of Rivers State, I congratulate all Christians in our state and across the country as they celebrate this year’s Christmas.

    “As we commemorate the birth of our Lord and Saviour, Jesus Christ, let us reflect on His virtues of love, humility, and selfless service, and apply these values in our lives to foster harmony, mutual respect, and progress,” the Governor said.

    Governor Fubara emphasized the importance of peaceful coexistence, particularly in addressing the nation’s current economic and security challenges. He urged citizens to rise above differences and focus on unity and understanding, stating that these are essential for attracting investment and accelerating development.

    He also highlighted the state government’s ongoing efforts to enhance the welfare of its people through improved infrastructure, healthcare, education, and economic opportunities.

    “We are committed to building a stronger Rivers State by delivering impactful projects, promoting job creation, and advancing the living standards of our citizens. Our administration is working tirelessly to ensure that our state becomes a hub of development and prosperity,” he said.

    Governor Fubara assured the people of Rivers State that the coming year would bring new opportunities and lasting fulfillment. “With God’s guidance and our collective efforts, 2025 will usher in greater achievements for our state and our nation. Let us remain steadfast in hope and unity as we build a brighter future together.”

    The Governor concluded by encouraging Rivers people and Nigerians to embody the teachings of Jesus Christ, particularly the principles of love, peace, and compassion.

    “This season is a time for renewal and rededication to these ideals. Together, let us create a society that reflects the true spirit of Christmas.”

    He wished everyone a Merry Christmas and a prosperous New Year, expressing optimism about the future of Rivers State and the country.

  • BREAKING: FG declares public holidays for Christmas, New Year

    BREAKING: FG declares public holidays for Christmas, New Year

    The President Bola Tinubu led administration has declared Wednesday 25th, Thursday 26th December 2024, and Wednesday 1st January, 2025 as Public Holidays in commemoration of the  Christmas celebrations, Boxing Day and New Year respectively.

    Dr, Magdalene Ajani, the Permanent Secretary in the Ministry of Interior, on behalf of Dr. Olubunmi Tunji-Ojo, the Minister of Interior, made the announcement in a statement on Monday in Abuja

    According to her, the minister extended greetings to all Nigerians, encouraging them to use the festive period to reflect on the values of love, peace, and unity that the season signifies.

    The minister who emphasized the importance of the season, which according to him, is a time to foster harmony and strengthen bonds called on Nigerians to remain committed to the peace, unity and progress of the nation for national development.

    “The Christmas season is a good moment for both spiritual reflection and national renewal. As we celebrate the birth of Jesus, the Prince of Peace, let us demonstrate kindness and extend goodwill to one another, irrespective of our differences,” said Dr. Tunji-Ojo.

    He assured citizens of the Federal Government’s continued commitment to ensuring peace, security, and prosperity across the nation.

    “While wishing Nigerians a merry Christmas and a prosperous 2025, the Minister expressed his confidence in the Renewed Hope Agenda of President Tinubu’s Administration ushering in the new year, a better and prosperous economy that will be the envy of the world”, the statement added.

  • Isi-Ewu for Christmas – By Sonnie Ekwowusi

    Isi-Ewu for Christmas – By Sonnie Ekwowusi

    Despite the excruciating economic hardship, grinding poverty, and strangulating hunger in the land, the hearts of men and women are still encumbered by the spirit and allure of Christmas. As we speak, country roads are trodden by anxious Christmas travelers eager to arrive in their villages and countryside to celebrate the season. If you listen carefully, you might hear the angels, the Magi, the shepherds, and men and women of our time inhabiting the four corners of the earth chanting in the horizon: “Jingle bell, jingle bell, jingle all the way…” in celebration of Christmas.

    From Washington, D.C., London, Paris, Montreal, Madrid, and Rome down to Abuja, houses, streets, offices, and shops are decorated with special festoons and rosettes to mark the dawn of dies natalis, the birthday of Jesus Christ, the Redeemer and Savior of the world.

    At Christmas, we are invited to relive that profound mystery that occurred more than 2,000 years ago when the second person of the Blessed Trinity took flesh in the womb of the Blessed Virgin Mary to be born among us. As the Psalmist puts it: “A child shall be born for us, and he will be called God, the Almighty; every tribe of the earth shall be blessed by him” (Isaiah 9:6). The prophet Malachi also re-echoes the urgency, immediacy, and eschatological underpinning of His coming: “But who will endure the day of his coming? And who can stand when he appears?” (Mal. 3:1-4).

    When peaceful silence enveloped the earth, and the night had run half of its swift course, God, who had taken flesh in the womb of the Blessed Virgin Mary, chose to be born in the relatively humble city of David called Bethlehem. St. Josemaria Escriva recaptured it in his words: “When the fullness of time came, no philosophical genius, no Plato or Socrates, appeared to fulfill the mission of redemption. Nor did a powerful conqueror, another Alexander, take over the earth. Instead, a child is born in Bethlehem.”

    I don’t know about you, but I am celebrating this Christmas with *isi-ewu* (cooked or roasted goat head, carefully chopped into tiny pieces, spiced with *utazi* leaves and alligator pepper, and served in a small wooden mortar). An accountant friend of ours is inviting us—his professional friends: lawyers, accountants, medical doctors, architects, and civil engineers—to an Igbo cuisine joint hidden away to tantalize our taste buds with *isi-ewu*. Of course, we will wash down the isi-ewu with palm wine and assorted beer.

    There is a time for everything under the sun. Throughout the year, we have been weeping and gnashing our teeth over complaints that Nigeria is not good. Must we continue to complain and gnash our teeth forever? No. Christmastime is a time to regain our cheerfulness. Agreed, the light has dimmed in Nigeria. Grinding poverty a-plenty. Prices of foodstuffs have soared beyond imagination. Dreams have become empty. Deaths plague the land. Agony and misery loom on the horizon. Heaven threatens to collapse on us, and the ground trembles as if ready to swallow us alive. But should we die in our melancholy? No. Amid hardships the spirit of Christmas endures.

    While the essence of Christmas is not about reveling in an orgy of self-deification, capricious expenditure, and militant consumerism, Christmas is a special time to relax, unwind, and enjoy the company of loved ones. After a year of hard work and challenges, it is important to take a moment to celebrate the birth of Jesus Christ, appreciate relationships, and create beautiful memories. Sharing a mortar of *isi-ewu* is more than just a meal—it’s a chance to reconnect, laugh, and recharge in the warm spirit of Christmas.

    I can’t wait to savor every moment of being with my friends at the isi-ewu joint. There’s something magical about the experience—the aroma of the spices wafting in the air, the taste of authentic palm wine from *Obeleagu* village, and chilled beer amid the joy of sharing with bosom friends. Isn’t that marvelous?

    Mind you, it’s not just about the *isi-ewu* the palm wine, or the beer, but the warmth, fellowship, solidarity, laughter, and memories created around the table. Whether it’s a perfectly spiced *isi-ewu*  or not, every bite feels like a celebration of hope and optimism.

    So, be hopeful. Everything may seem to be collapsing in Nigeria—politics may have become synonymous with thievery and hypocrisy, and human life may appear to have lost value—but nothing is gained by succumbing to despair, suicide, or melancholy. Be calm. Be patient. Be peaceful. Do not seek to flee from the world. Stop living as if God doesn’t exist.

    Agreed, this is not the life we envisioned. Life may have lost its meaning in Nigeria. Nigeria may feel like an accursed land. Can you imagine that, on the threshold of Christmas, thirty hunger-stricken people, mostly children, lost their lives in a stampede at a Christmas funfair in Ibadan? Meanwhile, the country’s political officeholders continued gallivanting as if nothing had happened.

    Can you imagine that, shortly after the Ibadan tragedy, another ten persons lost their lives while scrambling for palliatives in Abuja? And shortly after these tragedies, about nineteen Nigerians—mostly women—lost their lives in yet another stampede while scrambling for Christmas goodies in Okija, Anambra State.

    But, as I earlier stated, nothing is gained by losing hope. Permit me to share a small but significant thought: we must not lose hope amid these storms. Hope is our greatest asset. When we cease to hope, we cease to live. When we cease to live, we cease to hope.

    Yes, it is true that we live in a sad world, a world bereft of peace. But with our laughter and optimism, we can challenge this sadness and inspire hope. Writing to the Philippians, St. Paul states: “Rejoice in the Lord always. I say it again: Rejoice! Let your gentleness be evident to all. The Lord is near. Do not be anxious about anything, but in every situation, by prayer and petition, with thanksgiving, present your requests to God. And the peace of God, which transcends all understanding, will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus.”

    It is worth noting that St. Paul wrote these words while he was in prison. He did not allow melancholy to overcome him. He remained joyful and optimistic. The lesson for us here is that no matter how tragic the situation, we should not allow hopelessness to overcome us. Like St. Paul, let us remain hopeful, for the victorious warrior is in our midst.

    As we celebrate Christmas, let us remind ourselves that Nigeria needs a new humanism. We must learn to see our neighbors as human beings, not as mere instruments to satisfy selfish interests. Man is a social being. Nobody is an island. We are members of the same human family.

    Following the selfless example of Jesus, our political officeholders should bring light to this dark land, hope to the hopeless, justice to the oppressed, and integrity to the wasteland. On the other hand, the people must eschew greed, avarice, laziness, and corruption. It is hypocritical to blame corrupt leaders when the people themselves are guilty of the same vices. The self-sacrificing service of Jesus, Mary, and Joseph during the first Christmas is a call for us to be less self-centered and to attend to the needs of our fellow men and women.

    Finally, Christmas highlights the importance of the family in nation-building. Jesus was born into the family of Joseph and Mary. Everything in the Holy Family exemplifies values of concern, service, dedication, and altruism.

    The family is the nucleus of society. It plays a vital role in shaping individuals. The values imparted by the family in childhood form the foundation for an individual’s future behavior. No wonder the family has been dubbed the “cradle of values.” In Africa and Nigeria, the family, viewed from both historical and cultural perspectives, often serves as a provider of “social safety nets” that nurture individuals into responsible members of society. Therefore let us rejoin our families in this Christmas to savor with them the affection and warmth of family life.

    Wishing you and your family a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year!

  • If it’s confusing you: Don’t panic, it’s still Merry Christmas – By Ikeddy Isiguzo

    If it’s confusing you: Don’t panic, it’s still Merry Christmas – By Ikeddy Isiguzo

    By Ikeddy ISIGUZO

    HIS Excellency, Monday Okpebholo, Governor of Edo State, reading a budget on a Wednesday was a bad idea. Why not on a Monday? When your name is a day of the week, you should choose rightly. That was not the only thing that was wrong. Constitutional amendments should be fast-tracked to exempt some Governors from presenting the budget to their State Assemblies in person. They can transmit the budget.

    Those who have been heckling Okpebholo to speak since the campaigns heard an earful listening to him rambling through the Edo State Budget 2025. More used to addressing crowds, the Governor was nervous from the beginning. Was he expected to speak to a small gathering?

    No need taking a back glance for the assuring, towering presence of Senator Adams Oshiomhole who spoke mostly during the campaigns. He had to carry on, availing us an opportunity to listen to him without a human prompter, the role that Oshiomhole amply filled as he confused Edo State on why he has to be Governor. Nobody still knows why.

    Seeing billions of Naira in cash, or listening to others pronouncing it is not the same thing. Okpebholo was already in panic mode when he attempted the task. He began, his hands unsteady and voice quivering in the rarefied surroundings of the Assembly: “The Edo State Appropriation Bill of six billion… 605 billion… 76 million… Let me take it again. 506 billion… 605 billion… sorry… 776 billion… sorry, it’s confusing me”. He was truthful, a rare among politicians.

    “Order,” the Speaker of Edo State, Honourable Blessing Agbebaku thundered, daring to deny us a good laugh, the only thing that is still free in Nigeria. He was confusing us. We are unwilling to be confused.

    His Excellency has trended since then. T-shirts, caps, mugs, have been produced in celebration of his confessed confusion. A good signal is that Edo State funds are safe, a Governor who is unable to read out billions of Naira would not balloon the budget to trillions? Who would present it?

    Governor Okpebholo is not the only one confused. Many Nigeria are in panic whether there would be “Merry Christmas” this year, or “Merely Christmas”. It is confusing us, unlike Okpebholo whose confusion would not have much effect on his joint ownership of Edo State with those who have not ceased beating their chests about how they enthroned him.

    Families are in real pain. The confusion is not understandable. For months, just counting this year, families that have not had real meals, have renewed their hope on Christmas being an elixir. What informs this type of hope except, “it’s confusing me”?

    Since the days of COVID-19, remarkably marked by government officials allocating palliatives meant for the public to themselves, hope on relief for the hard times have been mainly in vain. It is also confusing that many government officials caught with palliatives are walking around free. There may just be no laws to prosecute such behaviour or too many people were involved that we could run out of if we jailed them.

    More confusing is the idle social media debates on why the value that people place on life is so little that parent saw their children die in the Christmas funfair that went bad in Ibadan. Many of us know poverty as a word. We have not felt the innermost recesses of poverty. The N5,000 that Queen Naomi was distributing is a lot of money to many Nigerians. How many Nigerians have it? That is where we are. Even if she was sharing only “pure water”, there would have still been a scramble, and deaths.

    Nigerians are hungry – just putting it mildly. Governments are too busy governing themselves that they are after their welfare and security, not the peoples’.

    President Bola Ahmed Tinubu is in Lagos issuing trite orders about investigating the incident. It would have taken less than 30 minutes for him to fly into Ibadan, visit the Governor, address those who lost their children. Some call it empathy while it is actually governance and more useful than those endless meetings that appear more concerned with detaching him from the people.

    Would it subtract anything from Tinubu’s presidency if he visits Ibadan? Those involved are children, the future.

    It is confusing people that government has minimal concerns for life. Imagine the National Security Adviser, proudly promoted as the first appointee to that position since 1999, without a military background, pulls out his statistics to assure us that he had achieved 80 per cent success against kidnapping. Statistics are almost meaningless in a country that the Ajaokuta Steel Rolling Mill has been under “97 per cent completion” during the Abacha days. He expects applauses for this magic. Maybe, national security has been reduced to success in lowering kidnapping incidents.

    No matter how confusing things are, do not panic, it is still Christmas. Merry Christmas to you.

    Finally…

    FOR a lawyer, Ezenwo Nyesom Wike, Minister of the Federal Capital Territory, should show some respect for the law by challenging the court orders that people wave at him. His exceeding determination to demolish property or revoke land allocations without looking at the papers of those who claim they have legitimate titles or court orders stopping Wike from acting, leave some people with no alternative than self-help, illegal too as it is. The army general, who allegedly sent his troops to attack Wike’s demolition squad was wrong but where could he get justice? The President will call Wike to order the day he demolishes the Villa.

    CHAIRMAN of the Police Service Commission, Mr. Hashimu Argungu, in emphasising the thoroughness that led to the promotion 0f 11 C0mmissioners of Police to Assistant Inspectors-General of Police and 16 Deputy Commissioners of Police to Commissioners of Police, said they took oral and written tests. Media reports indicate that the process was concluded on the same day though the number of participants was no disclosed. Quite a thorough process. Henceforth, Mr. Argungu has ordered, written and oral examinations would be a pre-requisite for promotions at all levels within the Nigerian Police Force.

    ON the first anniversary of the five-year $70,041,733.80 and N2,981,739,134.30 contract the Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Food Security signed with a private company to supply 2,000 tractors, implements and 100 combined harvesters annually, Honourable Saba Adam moved a motion last Tuesday, for an investigation of the non-delivery of the tractors and implements which he considered a setback to the Renewed Hope Agenda. Not a single tractor has been delivered, according to Adam.

    THE Court of Appeal in Kaduna has ruled that it is illegal for Customs to seize foreign rice outside border areas. They cannot therefore seize rice on the Benin-Shagamu Expressway or invade markets or anywhere else to seize rice, Justice Ntong Ntong declared on Wednesday.

    DR. David Umahi, Honourable Minister of Works, said on Friday that the Lagos-Calabar Highway would be reduced from 10 to six lanes. He said nothing about a possible reduction in the cost of the 700km project which will cost N4 billion per kilometre. It will be completed in eight years.

    THE Power of Nothing, the latest book by Ikem Okuhu, is a lot more than the nothingness of power. He has given society another chance to examine power, its nothingness, and possibly its somethingness.

    YOU have your own challenges, but there are people you can give something this season, and always. May the Almighty bless you as you put smiles on faces that are losing hope.

     

    ISIGUZO is a major commentator on minor issues.

  • Do the poor know it’s Christmas? – By Bobson Gbinije

    Do the poor know it’s Christmas? – By Bobson Gbinije

    By Bobson Gbinije

    “True love is like ghosts, which everybody talks about but few have seen”

    – William Shakespeare.

    The anthropocentric calculus posits that whether by centripetal or centrifugal diversions man has become the monumental leverage on which the social-political, economic and cultural pendulum swings. Man has therefore created laws, principles, social mores, ethics, ceremonial commemorations and religious practices to enhance and concretize the basis of the ‘Social Contract’ of which ‘MAN’ are the cardinal focus, the Christmas day being one of them.

    Christmas is the annual ceremonial commemoration of the birth of Jesus Christ by Christians on December 25. The encyclopedia Americana posits in the 1977 edition, volume 6, page 666 that “the reason for establishing December 25 as Christmas day was chosen to correspond to pagan festivals that seasonally  took place around the time of the winter solstice, when the days begin to lengthen to celebrate the rebirth of the sun. The roman saturnalia (A festival dedicated to Saturn, the god of agriculture, and to the renewed power of the sun), also took place at this time, and some Christmas customs are thought to be rooted in this ancient pagan celebration”

    The exact day of Christ’s birth is still subsumed in the ponderous thickets of scriptural imbroglio and shrouded in theosophical incongruities. Emperor Marcus Aurelius proclaimed the sun god on the 25 December 274. A.D. the principal patron of the Roman Empire and dedicated a temple to him in the campus martins. These ceremonial antics by emperor Aurelius stimulated a bandwagon effect on Christian groups and they quickly adopted December 25 as the birthday of Jesus Christ. Another version of the date of Christ’s birth was assigned the date of winter solstices December 25 in the Julia calendar) is because on this day, as the sun began its return to northern skies, the pagan devotees of Mithras celebrated the birthday of the invincible sun (die natails solis invicti).

    However, notwithstanding the penumbra of historical, theological and semantical mélange surrounding the date of the birth of Jesus Christ, it is clear that Jesus Christ is the reason for the Christmas season. He remains the lucent diadem on the Christian’s armour. He gave us his all as the son of the living God so that we might be salvaged from the labyrinth of eternal perdition. He explicitly sermonised on the laying down of our lives for one another through love and helping to fortify the basis of a common catholic humanity. He incarnated humility and warned against materialism and the psychotic love of money.

    That the unblemished and innocent Jesus Christ was tortured, persecuted, executed and crucified for the sake of mankind lends credence to the fact that the son of the living God loved us first. He came and was born out of love for us. He remains the quintessential reflection of love. He further admonished us to live and share our love with one another. He said in 1st John chapter 4 verses 20-21 that “if anyone says, “I love God”, yet hates his brother, he is a liar. For anyone who does not love his brother, whom he has seen cannot love God, whom he has not seen. And he has given us this command. Whosoever loves God must also love his brother.” But whither goeth mankind and the commemoration of the glorious birth of our Lord and Savour Jesus Christ.

    Christmas has become a season for the satanic expression of boundless mercantilism syphiliation of morality, the luciferous rendition of the carols of commercialism,  the baptism of financial nightmares and holocaust. The whole world is entangled in the zeitgeist of materialism. The Reader’s Digest asserted that “in 1999 America’s commercial exchanges during the Christmas season rose to 70 billion dollars, Canada 30 billion dollars, Britain 34 billion pounds and Australia 15 billion dollars. Africa and Asian countries are already following suit in this depraved and reckless commercialisation of Christmas.” The Christmas season has become one of the best commercially strategic period for manufacturers, wholesalers and merchants to render new and grotesque Christmas carols blaring from music shops, churches and private houses. There is massive noise pollution.

    The commercial hype is intensified with salesmen carrying large bags of Christmas knickknacks and souvenirs plying their trade on commuter buses and other public transport contraptions. All these Christmas drama compels ‘parents to buy toys and shoes for their children and companies are compelled to invest heavily on corporate gifts as public relations gimmicks. The Father Christmas or grandfather frost is introduced to milk parents dry. There is monumental production sales and hypocritical exchange of gifts. The commercial debauchery is further compounded by the deadly bouts of revelry and saturnalian spree. This is accompanied by sexual carousals and shameless licentiousness. Is this what Christmas should be? Is this the way Christmas should be spent? What a shame!

    In the political hierarchy are political Executives, Members of Boards, Ministers, Governors, Commissioners,Local Government  Chairmen, POLITICAL Appointees, Members of the Judiciary and councillors etc who have apotheosized corruption and have looted the treasury of the people jubilating in ‘THANKSGIVING SERVICES’  in various CHURCHES for escaping with loots from milking the people dry.

    The religious leaders, especially Pentecostal Pastors who are founders and sole owners of their churches will be very busy preaching the fear of hell fire and the dangers of not paying your tithes. They then convert the tithes, vows, pledges and donations in acquiring the state of the art cars, jets and palatial edifices for themselves. The Journalists, lawyers and Policemen will be smiling home with hampers and cash from politicians, clients and syndicated criminals. What a shame!

    It is clear that Christianity has become completely demonised and sunken in the hot cauldron of commercialism. Jesus Christ, our Lord and Saviour posited that, we can not serve God and Mammon. The world is in a state of moral degeneracy and cocooned in theatrical brummagem because of the greed, tenebrous and rancid hypocrisy inherent in our leadership echelon. How can we conscientiously say we are celebrating Christmas when poverty and disease have become the grandiloquent body guard of 99% of Nigerians and nay Africans. Do the poor know that it is Christmas? We live in a world of tragic contrast between the rich and the poor. Why can’t we see free medical health care delivery system, free education at all levels, good roads, transparency and honesty in leadership and government, instead of propaganda hypes? We need effective transportation system and a new national implosive SURGEONISATION. We want to see our LEADERS launch a steadfast fight against corruption and political skullduggery in Nigeria.Our lack  of visionary leadership in Nigeria, Africa and nay  our world, Climate change, horrors of COVID-19, Russia/Ukraine war, Israel/ Palestine war, Oil subsidy removal, religious schisms and oil cartels’ conspiracies has precipitated poverty of apocalyptic proportions in our world. All hands must be on deck to forestall these Octopoidal tentacles of genocidal poverty.

    Finally as we celebrate Christmas in the frills and thrills of salaciousness and Christlessness, let us spare a thought for the poor in the world. Our celebrations will be hollow if we cannot carry the poor along. We, as a Nation must stand for the truth and altruism. In the nomination acceptance speech of Richard Nixon, he said, “let us begin by committing ourselves to the truth, to see it like it is, and tell it like it is, to find the truth, to speak the truth and to live the truth.” Let us all chant glory to God in the highest and on earth peace and good tidings  to all mankind: Where are our good tidings to all mankind? Christmas should be spent in the retreat of the Holy of Holies with our conscience and in the presence of our God.

    Happy Christmas fellow Nigerians.

     

    Okakuro Bobson Gbinije, Mandate Against Poverty (MAP), Sapele, Delta State.