Tag: dubai

  • Of bullion vans, Dubai and presidential candidates for sale

    Of bullion vans, Dubai and presidential candidates for sale

    By Dan Abubakar

    In many places politicians are subjects of scorn and derision. And for good reason. They lie to the public as a matter of course and the compliment is sometimes returned with particularly aggrieved persons throwing rotten eggs, tomatoes or shoes at politicians engaged in a walkabout in England, France and elsewhere.
    Here in Nigeria people sometimes show their displeasure by shouting “yehoo!”, “barrow!” or “ole!”.
    The degeneration in the Nigerian specie of politicians is alarming, a factor of the abysmal lack of accountability of public officers over the years. Finagling with public funds which should earn culprits years in the slammer or public execution, as in China become a means to run for higher office.
    Some politicians now think it is all a game – one with no rules, no honour and no integrity needed. For them all is fair in politics as in war. Compromise has become the only governing principle of their existence.. Belonging to a political party means nothing other than as a vehicle to ride unto power. Parties are not grounded on ideas, programmes or ideology. There is no belief in principle or commitment to civic responsibility. Which is why politicians are acrobats jumping from one party to the other and back again, as Stella Oduah has just done most cynically. The story is told of one fellow who made the rounds with five political parties until he found one nondescript party that agreed to endorse his candidacy.
    Today who can with any certainty tell the difference between the APC and the PDP for instance or who is in which party at any point in time?
    The price the country is paying for this indulgence has become a very grave one indeed such that no one is addressing the serious issues that confront its very existence. And politics which is a time-honoured process for a society to choose its leaders is being discredited.
    Many of our politicians seem not to apprehend the danger here and are plunging further and farther into the murk.
    Let us begin with the number of those who say they want to be president. Surely, majority of those who have announced themselves cannot be serious. Other than media announcements and adding to the garbage on our streets from their falling posters how is one to take the announcements by Mohammed Hayatudeen, Ibikunle Amosun, Adams Oshiomhole, or the Cross River state entrant, Ben Ayade seriously?
    Much comic relief is provided by such pretenders to the throne as Rivers governor Nyesom Wike, Kogi state governor Yahaya Bello and ….this other fellow. Pardon me I forget his name.
    Yet the state of Nigeria is no laughing matter. Neither should the contest to succeed President Mohammed Buhari be an opportunity for the usual horse-trading or massive financial inducements as has become the manner with many. The rule of thumb should be that anyone who bribes to achieve a position such as the presidency is not qualified for it quite apart from being a criminal.
    Our present political predicament bears restating.The process for candidates to emerge for the 2023 presidential election is being confounded by the impression that the presidency is for all-comers. Or is there a certain method to the present madness?
    Some ‘candidates’ may be doing it to seek attention, not wanting to be left in the shadows of others who have already declared. Others may be seeking to use their professed ambition as a bargaining chip for a future demand. Politicians everywhere do this and cash their chips when the opportunity arises.
    But there may be something more sinister afoot. There is now strong suspicion that a lot of the declared ambitions are by phantom candidates, individuals who are not at all serious and who for the right consideration will step down for their benefactors thus presenting the impression of a bandwagon. This stratagem, it is said, is by certain candidates in both parties who are known to be flush with funds. That is why in political circles there is now so much talk about bullion vans, opening of Dubai-based financial spigots and impending shortage of dollars in the market.
    It is reassuring that money has never been the determinant of who rules Nigeria even if the process had in the past been rigged against the best emerging. But this time Nigerians must make their voices loud and clear to the political parties that the sun must be allowed to shine on the one or two roses in their midst that seek to bloom for everyone’s sake..

  • Chrisland’s Dubai Five and Our Digital Footprints – By Azu Ishiekwene

    Chrisland’s Dubai Five and Our Digital Footprints – By Azu Ishiekwene

    Most parents like to think that their generation’s burden was the heaviest. And that today’s children are too soft and spoilt by the easy life to be up to any good. Well, I disagree. Or let me put that a bit differently: I don’t agree completely.

    The debate about just how far astray today’s children have gone was sparked afresh by the juvenile sex video of students of Chrisland School, VGC, Lagos, who had gone for the World Schools Games in Dubai between March 8 and 14.

    Since that video was leaked a few days ago, the “Dubai Five”, the children involved, have taken a serious verbal beating. Deeply distraught members of the public have been holding up the video as proof that after many years of parental negligence, we may have succeeded in raising aliens who will succeed us.

    How can children sent on a special programme at great expense by their parents for only a few days and in the care of their teachers, turn a learning opportunity into a sex orgy? How can children enrolled in one of the country’s most expensive private schools and who may have been selected for this programme on merit, let themselves, their parents and school down so badly?

    Isn’t that video the final piece in the jigsaw puzzle which shows that years of namby-pamby parenting can only raise a generation of self-indulgent, grasping and self-absorbed children whose only interest is instant gratification at any cost?

    The short answer, is, not exactly. But the explanation is long and complicated.

    What happened in Dubai was a nightmare beyond description and even for a country so used to stumbling from one painful distraction to the next, this one would be hard to sweep under the rug. Yet, I think it would be a bridge too far to cite it as evidence of the final takeover of the wayward generation.

    Far from being lost and wayward, I think that today’s youngsters, particularly those belonging to Generation Z, the closest demographic cousins of the Dubai Five, are perhaps more vocal, more diverse, more socially connected, smarter and certainly curiouser than any generation before them.

    Interestingly, the smartphone, that pervasive device and perhaps the single most powerful force in the lifestyle of this generation is both an extraordinary source of pleasure and a huge source of misery for them. It’s their playground, of course. But sadly also, it’s their trap – the most intrusive tool ever invented since George Orwell’s Big Brother.

    That is not to downplay the gravity of what happened in Dubai. It’s simply an invitation to be a little less sanctimonious, a call to put aside the heart-breaking foolishness of the Dubai Five, and to reflect for a moment, on what might have been only, say, 40 years ago.

    If our parents had the benefit of smartphones to scrutinise and monitor us at school and play, would they have seen something dramatically different in our secret lives from what we see in the Dubai Five today?

    We should be shocked and outraged and sad that out of 76 children who went on a weeklong sport competition, what we’re being reminded of is not the laurels they competed for or the strides made, but a video that reminds us of how disastrously we’re failing in our duties as schools and parents.

    I’m appalled that Chrisland is once again at the centre of this scandal less than three years after a teacher in the school was tried and convicted for raping a two-year-old girl in the school and after it also came short of a public showdown with parent and actress Mercy Johnson-Okojie over allegations of child bullying.

    The school has explained that it went to extraordinary lengths to keep the children safe and away from mischief. That it kept them seven floors apart in the Dubai hotel where they were lodged. It also denied carrying out any pregnancy tests on the child as her parents alleged, saying what was done was the mandatory Covid-19 test on their return from the trip and actually named the laboratory where the test was done.

    On top of that, it has explained that the authorities went the extra mile to engage the mother of the child after the matter came to light in a post-travel review, but that she refused to cooperate and at a stage, threatened to “take the matter to social media,” because she believed that her daughter had been drugged and “raped” and that the school was trying to cover up.

    The school failed in its duty of care, even though the board insists that the authorities had been implementing a higher standard of child care and protection since the unfortunate incidents of the past and, in fact, awarded itself a pass mark that out of 76 children taken to Dubai only five let the school down.

    But the five, even one, is 100 per cent to the parents involved. Having nine staff members, comprising seven male teachers and two females, look after 76 students of 50 boys and 26 girls, was a recipe for trouble.

    But the parents didn’t do better. Listening to the recorded video of the mother of the girl, you would almost think her daughter’s fees was the price for outsourcing responsibility of parental care. And it breaks your heart to think that while her daughter was still nursing the trauma from the exposure, she had time to be coached by a social media influencer for a PR dogfight with the school.

    Part of the disease of the rich is that they not only boast of sending their children to big schools and also boast of paying hefty fees, they think that their money should buy them presence in their children’s lives. That is apart from payments for regular indulgences like a smartphone before they have left the crib and a trip to Dubai with Uncle T and the rest of the creche family while the parents are watching Zee-World at home. It’s not funny.

    In the blame game between the school and the parents, care for the Dubai Five – which should be the real focus of the unfortunate incident – is missing. The ego of the feuding parties makes them want to protect their own turf, while busybodies swoon with testosterone over the explicit video. In between the real question is lost: who recorded the video and how did it go out?

    Whether the sex was consensual or not and whether the juveniles had the cognitive capacity to recognise what they were doing, it is improbable that any of the parties involved would have authorised the sharing of the video, as part of the so-called “Truth or Dare” game. And that unauthorised sharing was a crime. It was a ghastly infringement on the rights of the children and can only deepen their wound.

    If we care about the children beyond nailing them to the cross of social gossip, we must come down from our high horses and refrain from tossing them out like a few bad apples. That would only further damage their esteem and impair their recovery. And here, I’m concerned not only about the treatment of the juveniles involved in the act, but also those present in the room and all 76 on that trip.

    Lagos State has to do better than closing the school. It has to investigate the source of the recording and leakage and provide a common ground for the school and parents of the Dubai Five to rehabilitate the children, perhaps with help from child welfare specialists outside government. It’s time to put the children front and centre.

    Though Lagos is considered perhaps the most socially responsive state in the country, its handling of the tragic death of Bowen College student Sylvester Omoroni who died under very suspicious circumstances leaves a bad taste in the mouth. Chrisland would be a good place for the state to redeem itself and to show that at least when children’s lives are involved it is not a captive to the mob or special interests.

    The story of the “Central Park Five”, a group of five teenagers in the U.S. wrongly accused and convicted of a crime they didn’t commit shows that where technology is rudimentary the state’s malicious incompetence could be exploited to ruin young lives and families.

    The story of the Dubai Five shows, however, that surrendering our lives completely to technology, in a race in which children are destined to lead, also comes with a heavy price. And our absence from their lives could sometimes make the price even heavier.

    Ishiekwene is the Editor-In-Chief of LEADERSHIP

  • Chrisland School saga: International charity seeks comprehensive protection for kids

    Chrisland School saga: International charity seeks comprehensive protection for kids

    An international charity has urge states in Nigeria to domesticate the Child’s Rights Act forthwith, to give maximum protection to kids following the Chrisland School sex tape saga.

    IA-Foundation, a London-based charity, which is active in Nigeria made the call while reacting to the latest Chrisland School scandal, involving pupils of the school in faraway Dubai in the United Arab Emirates.

    The Chief Executive Officer of the foundation, Mrs Ibironke Adeagbo, who spoke on the issue in a telephone interview with newsmen in Abuja on Thursday described the sex tape saga as totally embarrassing.

    Nigeria enacted a Child’s Rights Act in 2003 but nine states in the country, including Adamawa, Borno, Bauch, Gombe, Jigawa, Kebbi, Yobe, Kano and Zamfara have yet to domesticate the Act.

    In a viral video, a 10-year-old female pupil of Chrisland School was seen involved in sexual acts with some male pupils of the school during a trip to Dubai for the World School Games, held from March 8 to March 14 this year.

    The development prompted the Lagos State Government to shut down Chrisland Schools in the state, drafting the police to delve into the matter.

    Condemning the alleged involvement of the school kids in sex acts, Adeagbo said that every Nigerian school should promptly put child protection policies in place to ensure adequate protection of pupils while in the confines of schools.

    “We use this opportunity to dissuade parents from giving their children and wards unfettered access to the internet.

    “We also commend the Lagos State Government for swinging into action by opening up inquiry into the incident.’’

    Adeagbo, however, appealed for immediate re-opening of the school, saying that further delay would affect the education of other pupils of the school, who had been forced to stay out of school because of the closure of their school.

    “IA-Foundation also calls on government at all levels to invest heavily in safeguarding children while in school by ensuring that teachers are given regular training on child-protection policies,’’ she said.

    Chrisland School, located at Victoria Garden City, a highbrow community in Lekki, Lagos, is no stranger to sex scandals, involving pupils of the school.

    Three years ago, a supervisor in the school, Adegboyega Adenekan, was jailed 60 years for defiling a two-year-old child in the school.

  • Dubai new Human Trafficking destination – NAPTIP

    Dubai new Human Trafficking destination – NAPTIP

    Mr. Nduka Nwanwenne, Benin Zonal Commander, The National Agency for the Prohibition of Trafficking in Persons (NAPTIP) has disclosed that Dubai, United Arab Emirate (UAE), is now the destination of choice of victims of human trafficking.

    He disclosed this on Wednesday, in Benin, at the commencement of a three-day sensitisation programme on human trafficking.

    Nwanwenne explained that against the norm where victims of human trafficking were transported by their traffickers by land to their destinations, victims were now air transported.

    “This is because the human traffickers have stepped up their game, and the destination of choice of victims of human trafficking was now Dubai.

    “Human Trafficking is not abating in the country, because traffickers make so much money from their victims so they take it as a business.

    “The traffickers are now also concentrating on rural areas for recruitment of their victims”, he said.

    The zonal commander also revealed that irregular migration was also been used as a ploy for human trafficking, such that its victims were being exploited for their organs.

    “There is now an increase in organ harvesting not just for money rituals, but also for transplants.

    “This is because the need for organs is higher than the supply”, he added.

    While noting that the issue of human trafficking was still on the front burner, Nwanwenne said that there was a need for partnership to end human trafficking.

    He said that baby sales/baby factory operations were part of human trafficking and that there was a need for concerted efforts to end human trafficking.

    “As security agencies we must be alive to our duties. We must join hands with government to fight the issue of human trafficking. I must also advice parents to stop putting pressure on their children to go and make money.

    “Parents should control themselves and give birth to only the number of children they can cater for” he said.

    Earlier, Segun Sanwo, representing the team lead for A-TIPSOM, Nigeria, said that the organisation believed that prevention was the bedrock to solving human trafficking.

    Sanwo said that creating awareness was also a key to the fight against human trafficking, but that fighting the menace rested with individuals.

    In her goodwill message, Mrs Adefunke Abiodun, first zonal commander, NAPTIP, Benin Zonal Office, said that NAPTIP couldn’t fight human trafficking alone.

    She said that everyone needed to work collaboratively to make progress, as the fight against human trafficking was a collective thing.

    Newsmen reports that the sensitisation programme was organised in partner with the Action Against Trafficking in Persons and Smuggling of Immigrants in Nigeria (A-TIPSOM) Nigeria.

    The programme was funded by the European Union (EU) and implemented by the International Ibero-America Foundation for Administration and Public Policies (FIIAPP), a Spanish Government Foundation.

  • BREAKING: Lagos Govt shuts down Chrisland schools over immoral act

    BREAKING: Lagos Govt shuts down Chrisland schools over immoral act

    The Lagos State Government announced on Monday the shutdown of all Chrisland Schools in the State following an alleged s#xual v#olation involving some pupils during an international trip.

    The school has at least seven branches in the State. The alleged s#xual v#olation happened when Chrisland school was in Dubai in March to take part in the World School Games, a four-day annual competition with schools from all over the world.

    The statement read, “The attention of the Lagos State Government has been drawn to the alleged s#xual v#olence case involving students of Chrisland school.

    “It is pertinent to note that all allegations are being investigated by the relevant Ministries, Departments and Agencies, including Ministry of Education, Office of Education QualityAssurance, Ministry of Youth and Social Development, Ministry of Justice and the Lagos State Domestic & S#xual V#olence Agency, whilst the criminal allegations have been escalated to the Commissioner of Police.

    “We are committed to ensuring that adequate medical and psycho social support is provided.

    “This is to reassure members of the public of the State Government’s commitment to safety and child protection, especially in ensuring that all child-centered institutions within the state, formulate and implement policies and systems that are compliant with the Executive Order (NO.EO/AA08 of 2016), Lagos State Safeguarding and Child Protection Program.

    “We also use this medium to remind the general public on the implications pertaining to engaging in any visual depiction of s#xually explicit conduct involving a child commits an offence and is liable to custodial sentence of fourteen (14) years.

    “This includes “producing, distributing, receiving, or possessing an image of child p#rnography” In the meantime, all Chrisland schools within Lagos State are hereby closed, pending further investigations”.

    Chrisland school had suspended the 10-year-old female pupil involved in the act after accusing her of taking part in a truth-or-dare game in Dubai.

    Pupils from the elite high school were in Dubai in March to participate in the World School Games between March 10-13, 2022. The school was celebrated for carrying out an impressive display and winning about 34 medals.

    In the April 14, 2022, letter to the girl’s parent, authorities at Chrisland School in Victoria Island Garden City told the girl’s father that she took part in “improper behaviour” after playing the truth-or-dare game, describing her as a “major participant”.

    “In line with our core values centred on discipline, Chrisland Schools have zero tolerance for any improper behaviour and misconduct,” the school said in a letter signed by its principal, Georgia Azike.

    The school said other schoolmates who took part in the game had been suspended, adding that the girl and her parents did not cooperate during its investigation.

    “Consequently, [name redacted) is hereby placed on indefinite suspension until you as the parents ensure that she is punished, adequately counselled and rehabilitated,” the school said.

    The letter was obtained hours after social media claims about the matter emerged. Friends of the father said a pregnancy test had been conducted and the school initially hushed up the case.

    A spokesman for Chrisland did not return a request seeking comments about the allegations.

    The development came weeks after Sylvester Oromoni died under controversial circumstances at Dowen College, another elite school in Lagos.

  • The world is in need more than ever before – Tony Elumelu

    The world is in need more than ever before – Tony Elumelu

    As the Chairman of United Bank for Africa Plc, and Tony Elumelu Foundation, Mr. Tony Elumelu, yesterday, accepted the TIME 100 Impact Award at the Museum of the Future in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, he said that “The world is in need of people like him more than ever before.”

    Elumelu, who took the stage at Monday night’s TIME100 Impact Awards and Gala, spoke with a sense of urgency.

    According to him, “The world is in need of people like us—more than ever before,” he said to the crowd, which included celebrities, politicians and prominent business leaders. “We should pull resources together, we should commit now to help in anyway possible in economically empowering others,” he added.

    Elumelu’s plea is part of the reason he was on the stage at the Museum of the Future in Dubai in the first place. The TIME100 Impact Award recipient has spent his career advocating for economic empowerment in the less fortunate places in the world.

    The Nigerian entrepreneur paid tribute to the “hard-working young men and women in Africa who aspire to help their families and their communities.”

    He shared his story of rising from a modest beginning to launching the Tony Elumelu Foundation in 2010, which is aimed at creating “significant opportunities and economic hope for others” while “helping redefine how all of us need to work together to uplift through the message of entrepreneurship.”

    The foundation has given $5,000 each to 15,000 young entrepreneurs from 54 African countries as part of his effort to grow the entrepreneurial spirit in Africa and encourage economic development.

    In addition to his philanthropic efforts, Elumelu serves as chair of the United Bank of Africa, where his vision for securing long-term investments from the private sector to drive economic development in Africa has helped create new job opportunities and turn the continent into a hub for

    innovation. And Monday night, Elumelu stressed that Africa, and the world, need investment and opportunities more than ever.

    “In the 21st century, there’s so much poverty, sickness, and bitterness in the world,” he said. “Our calling should be one that has to prioritize humanity.”

  • EXPOSED: How Plateau Gov plans to spend N73m tax payers money on summit/medical tourism in Dubai/ US

    EXPOSED: How Plateau Gov plans to spend N73m tax payers money on summit/medical tourism in Dubai/ US

    …Covid-19 tests for 12 persons to gulp N4.9m

    …flight tickets for gov and wife to cost N19.6m

    Despite excruciating pangs of hunger and lack in Nigeria, the Governor of Plateau State, Simon Lalong and his entourage are billed to visit Dubai and the United States which will cost NN73,686,340.00.

    TheNewsGuru.com, (TNG) reports this is coming barely 48hours after newly sworn-in Governor of Anambra, Prof Charles Soludo revealed that his predecessor, Willie Obiano left a meagre N300million out of over $150m left in the state coffers by Peter Obi in March 2014.

    TNG recalls that Obi had in different fora told Nigerians about all the monies he left behind in different accounts running to over N75bn without owing any money only for his successor to leave behind over N100bn debts and liabilities. Could this too be loading in Plateau.

    To this end, here are details of Lalong latest Expenditure on summit and medical tourism.

    Lalong, his wife and 10 other key officers of the Plateau government are expected to attend the economic summit, thereafter the governor would embark on a medical tourism to Atalanta Georgia in the United States.

    Details of the travel scheduled for March 27 as contained in the SSG’s memo (Attached) dated March 18 revealed that the following expenses will be incured by the state government.

    FLIGHT TICKETS(RETURNED)
    i.
    His Excellency & Wife (1″ Class)
    @ N9,829,079 X 2 (Abj-Dub-All) =
    N19,658,158.00
    ii.
    Air Tickets for 2 Aides @
    N1,195,288 Each (Abj-Dub-Atl)
    (i.e. 2 Pers Assts))
    N2,390,576.00
    iii. Return Ticket for 8 Officials
    (Abj-Dub-Abj) @N937.225 each = N7,497.800.00
    iv.
    UAE Visa Fees @ N150,000 x 6
    N 900,000.00

    Miscellaneous Charges
    N250,000.00
    vi. COVID19 Tests for 12 persons
    N4.950,000.00
    Sub-Total = N35.646.534.00
    B.
    ESTACODE ALLOWANCES
    i. Estacode for 3 Commissioners &
    Chairman Econ. Council $600
    * N580x 10 days * 4persons
    N13,920,000.00
    ii. Two (2) Chief Executives of
    Parastatals (Chrys & Felix) @
    @ $500 * N580 x 10 days x 2 N5,800,000.00
    ii. Two Pers Assis. at $400 x 17 days
    * N580 x 2 persons (Dubai & USA)= N7,880,000.00
    Estacode for DOPPA at $400 x 10
    Days x N580 (Dubai Only)
    N2,320,000.00

    Estacode for Pers. Physician at
    $400 x 10 Days x N580 (Dubai only)= N2,320,000.00
    vi. Trips & Accommodation for 3
    Cmms & Chairman State Econ
    Council in Abuja @ N500,000
    each
    N2,000,000.00
    vii. Trips & Accomm. For 2 Chief Exec
    of Parastatals in Abuja @ N300,000= N600,000.00
    Each
    viil. Trips and Accommodation for
    4 Aides in Abuja at N300,000 each= N1.200,000.00
    SUB-TOTAL= N36,040,000.00
    C. Contingency
    N2,000,000.00
    GRAND TOTAL =
    N73,686,340.00

  • I Have Been Ordered To Join 2023 Presidential Race – By Mideno Bayagbon

    I Have Been Ordered To Join 2023 Presidential Race – By Mideno Bayagbon

    By Mideno Bayagbon

    mideno@thenewsguru.ng

    Here is the news: I have been ordered to join the 2023 Presidential race. This is authentic. It is, as it were, from the horse’s mouth. And I have no choice. Consider it a fait accompli. I have been ordered and it is compulsory that I obey; no questions asked. The order has come from quarters no man in his right senses would disobey. It has come from the one I sometimes call, head of government or Amebo Deno!

    All I can say for now, is that you, my dear friends, and enemies alike, get ready. Get ready to give your widow’s mite. Get ready to pound the streets, knock on doors, shake every hand, and take the message to all the hamlets, villages, towns and cities of this country. It is urgent, it is incumbent. No excuses. No dilly-dallying. We will win the race without the billions of stolen funds politicians have stacked.

    Yet I did not, even in my wildest dreams, think of going into Nigerian politics. I have over the years resisted every attempt to co-opt me into it. I have rejected appointments up to the federal level and refused serious attempts to drag me into contesting for political offices. Yes, yet here I am, now fully into the race and I am starting at the top. I am now ready to give all the Tinubus, the Amaechis, the Anyims, the Atiku Ababakars, the Sarakis, and so on, a run for their money. And I will triumph, beating them silly, even in their homesteads.

    With a government like that of President Mohammadu Buhari, which has messed up all that we hold dear in this country, it is easy to draw up an action plan and raison d’être. It will be easy to draw up the campaign messages: the hunger in the land, the massive insecurity, in all their gory dimensions, which have enveloped the nation; the governmental incompetence which has catapulted the nation into the poorest nation on earth. These are all tools which will resonate with the average Nigerian whether in Kafachan or Lokoja; Jeddo or Opobo; Obolo Afo or Enugu Ezike; Oke Ipadi or Oke Afa. North, South, East or West, we are guaranteed foot soldiers. The campaign promises will be based on the lived reality of the average Nigerian.

    Someone may ask: what has changed. Why this sudden interest in politics and in contesting for the highest office in the land? Some may wonder if this is the handiwork of some latter-day prophet. Or if it is some well-hidden life ambition I’m just letting to come to the fore now. Yet others may wonder, though I have passed the age if I am having a late mid-life crisis. Or, they may even wonder, if I have suddenly come into some stupendous inheritance from the late billionaire, Steve Jobs or a long lost grand uncle. As we all know, running for office in Nigeria is a money guzzling venture only gamblers, corrupt politicians and their ilks are tailored for.

    Moreover, some may even wonder why a good, principled and God-fearing Christian is aspiring to soil his name, reputation and faith in the murky waters of Nigerian politics. My answer is simple. Apart from the general good one can do to drag the nation back from the precipice which the Buhari government and career politicians have pushed it, It is an opportunity to be the difference, to be the donkey who will attempt to redirect the economic, social and political courses of the nation unto the right port.

    Moreover, I am a man under authority. I have been ordered and I am obliged to compulsorily obey. This is more so when it is taken into account who gave the order. Maybe I should at this stage take a step back and lay all the cards on the table.

    Like they say in Waffi, my gbeghe started when the news came, and video evidence flooded the social media space, that wives of Nigerian governors and their usual retinue of Friends of the Office, had gone to Dubai. Accompanied by an enviable entourage of the creme of female Nigerian politicians and hangers-on, the first ladies very graciously banded together in one accord to go and felicitate with the wife of the President, Aisha, who for almost two years now has made Dubai her permanent abode.

    Cakes, flowers and gifts in hand, they thronged the palatial Dubai home of the Nigerian first lady in exile, singing lusciously an enthralling happy birthday song. It was such a pleasing sight to see all the beautiful first ladies, from all divide, showering love on the wife of the President. How elated and proud I was to be a Nigerian.

    My joy did not spring from only the fact that Aisha is so loved. Or that so much Nigerian love was being shown to her in the Nigerian annexe city of Dubai, where, for her peace of mind and safety, I will assume, she has found a home. I was proud and joyful because once again, we have shown to the world that we are not a banana republic. Don’t mind the jealous bodies which classify Nigeria as the poverty capital of the world. How they must be green with envy when the bevvy of Nigerian first ladies flooded Dubai. Shame to all the bad people.

    Thank God we are blessed with the spirit of high-class living. We know how to flaunt the nation’s wealth in our private enjoyments. I must be the first to say that the about N2 billion the first ladies and their entourage spent on first-class air travel; the barely manageable $1,440,000 ($720,000 for the first ladies and $720,000 for their entourage); or so allowance and all the additional expenditures, no one alive in the United Arab Emirate, especially its commercial capital city will for once forget, how we truly honour and celebrate our rulers and their spouses. Even those fortunate to fly the same airline with them must have wondered why they simply didn’t commandeer private jets to fly them instead of the inconvenience of a N6.5 million first-class cubicle. Such humility is unacceptable, by our standards.

    With which eyes did the friends of the First Ladies, who accompanied them, as part of the entourage, which included the ADCs to the First Ladies, their other security details and protocol officers, manage to bear the shame of a N4.5 million business class ticket? If the First Ladies have asked me to consult for them on how to truly mount a memorable birthday train to Dubai, I would have suggested they each get a private jet to carry their likely entourage of ten persons. Imagine 36 private jets landing in Dubai at about the same time. How high our nation’s profile and reputation in the comity of nations would have risen.

    Thank God they still have another opportunity next year, the last year Aisha will celebrate her birthday while her husband is president. It will also be the last time some of them whose husbands’ tenure will also come to an end next year will have such a great opportunity to show the world how much love, denominated in whatever currency, they have for the Nigerian First Lady. They must correct the glaring errors of being unduly modest when we are such a great nation which can afford an annexe Aso Rock Villa in Dubai.

    Should they still fail to do it properly even then, they should not trouble themselves too much. This is because December 24th of 2023 will be a great opportunity for them to adequately begin expressing their uncommon love for my wife, who has ordered that I must be president so that she too can be Aisha-ed at her birthday. The only difference is that no Aso Rock mafia will be strong enough to chase her from the president’s matrimonial bed to far away Dubai; or some other exotic city. She is made of sterner stuff than that.

    Fortunately, too, there is no way I will allow her to even dream of it. As wife of the president, she will live in Aso Rock. I won’t fund it and will never use public funds for such frivolities. It is true, no one has told us so far how Aisha is funding her lavish stay in Dubai. Who is paying? is it the president from his private purse or the ordinary Nigerian?

  • [Trending video] Nigerian govs’ wives in Dubai to present birthday cake to Aisha Buhari

    [Trending video] Nigerian govs’ wives in Dubai to present birthday cake to Aisha Buhari

    Aisha Buhari, the wife of President Muhammadu Buhari, has received a surprise birthday cake from a delegation of Nigerian governors’ wives who visited her in Dubai.

    In a video circulating on social media, the governors’ wives led by Bisi Fayemi, the wife of Ekiti State governor, were seen presenting a cake with a bouquet of flowers to the first lady who clocked 51 on Thursday, February 17.

    The video has triggered outrage among Nigerians on social media who slammed the governor’s wives for wasting the country’s resources to visit Aisha Buhari who is enjoying herself in Dubai while Nigeria is battling with fuel scarcity, ASUU strike, inflation, and many other issues.

    Watch video:

    See reactions:
    -Gov’s wives led by Bisi Fayemi went to Dubai to present a cake to Aisha Buhari on her birthday. An entirely useless act and waste of resources
    Nigerians are battling with “No fuel” wahala, and here are some ladies flaunting silliness.

    -Nigerian Governors Wives fly to Dubai to present Aisha Buhari with birthday cake while ASUU is on strike.
    Pls if your mother is here just DISMOTHER her asap.

    -Wives of Nigerian governors embark on a lavish, very wasteful trip to Dubai to “celebrate” the birthday of Aisha Buhari, who has long relocated to Dubai whilst her husband, dictator Buhari, is President of Nigeria. Ironic?

    -Presidency: Not to upset Nigerians who are currently feeling the brunt of fuel scarcity and ASUU strike coupled with the heatwave, Nigeria’s first lady Aisha Buhari has received a birthday cake from state governor’s wives in Dubai instead of Abuja.

  • Air Peace to resume direct flights to Dubai, March 1

    Air Peace to resume direct flights to Dubai, March 1

    Nigeria’s leading airline, Air Peace has announced its readiness to resume direct scheduled flights to Dubai, United Arab Emirates on March 1.

    The airline’s spokesperson, Mr Stanley Olisa, confirmed the development in a statement on Friday in Lagos.

    Olisa said that the airline was also set to launch flight operations into Niamey, Niger, on Feb. 25 and in Kinshasha and Malabo in first quarter of the year.

    He said that the Lagos-Dubai-Lagos flights would operate three days weekly from any of its domestic routes through its Lagos hub.

    “We are happy to inform the flying public that in tandem with our commitment to provide more flight connectivity and meeting the air travel needs of Nigerians, we are restarting our UAE operations, but with Dubai as the destination, and not Sharjah.

    “We abundantly appreciate the vital role played by the Nigerian government in making this possible,” Olisa said.

    The spokesperson said that before the first quarter runs out, the airline would begin scheduled flights to Kinshasha, DR Congo and Malabo, Equatorial Guinea.

    According to him, this is to enlarge its footprints in West Africa and offer the flying public more network options.

    He said that Niamey flights would operate from Abuja and Kano on Tuesdays, Fridays and Sundays with the Hopper jets.

    Olisa noted that the airline had been operating scheduled commercial flights into the UAE since July 2019, and would continue to scale up its service delivery to surpass the expectations of air travelers,.

    The spokesperson said that this was especially with the activation of its ambitious fleet modernisation scheme and a renewed commitment to unequalled customer experience.

    He added that Air Peace had also been designated by the Federal Government to fly into other international destinations such as Guangzhou-China, Delhi-India, U.K and Houston-US.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the airline leads the industry with 20 domestic routes, six regional routes and two international destinations.

    It presently operates a modern fleet of 34 aircraft, including five brand new E195-E2s and five Airbus 320s.