Tag: nigerian

  • [Video] Covid-19: Permit us into isolation centers to heal sick Nigerians – Apostle Suleman begs FG

    The founder of Omega Fire Ministry, Apostle Johnson Suleman, has urged the President Muhammadu Buhari Government, to allow pastors to heal COVID-19 patients.

    He stated this during an online broadcast via his church’s Facebook page on Saturday.

    Suleman said those with the gift of divine healing need to be given permission, to visit isolation centres and heal people.

    “Please (referring to the government) permit us to go and pray for COVID-19 patients. Allow us to go there (isolation centres), that is why there are men of God,” he said.

    “If you are really anointed to pray for the sick, this is the time because what is holding the world is sickness. So, we’re begging the government to permit us into isolation centres, that is the only way we can reduce this nonsense because it will improve every day.

    “There are people with the gift of healing, God has gifted them to pray for the sick. It is not fake, gimmick or arranged. It is there in them. Permit us so that we can prove there are prophets in Nigeria.”

    Watch video:


    As at Saturday night, there were 1,095 confirmed cases of Coronavirus in Nigeria.

    There is still no approved vaccine for the virus.

  • I can never regret being a Nigerian- Boy Alinco

    I can never regret being a Nigerian- Boy Alinco

    Popular actor, Bayo Bankole a.k.a Boy Alinco has expressed his love for Nigeria despite relocating to the U.S.

    In a chat with The Nation, he said: “I can never regret being a Nigerian. I was misquoted. Nigeria is bigger than me and every Nigerian. I have never had any form of regret being a Nigerian,” he disclosed.

    Alinco known for his role as Boy Alinco in Wale Adenuga’s hilarious sitcom, ‘Papa Ajasco and Company has starred in movies like Eda, Owoblow, Aditu, Ilu America, Yankee Lowo Kan, and 13th Day: Ojo Ketala.

    Speaking further, he disclosed that nothing can be compared to the freedom that can be enjoyed in one’s country.

    While recalling with nostalgia, his time in Nigeria, he quipped: “I miss my family and friends, I miss the freedom you deserve only in your fatherland and ultimately I miss the unparalleled fun and culture.”

    Asked why he exited Wale Adenuga Productions, Bankole made light of the question saying, “Broda, old don pass away, that one na old tori, make we close that chapter.”

    On the priceless lessons he learned from the ghastly Texas auto crash of 2018, he highlighted the importance of insurance saying “Insurance is quite essential and works very well. It can also work in Nigeria for entertainers.”

     

  • Nigerian bags appointment as President of American College

    Nigerian bags appointment as President of American College

    A Nigerian, Benjamin Ola-Akande, Ph. D has been appointed the 9th President of Champlain College, USA.

    The Chair of Champlain College Board of Trustees, Charles Kittredge, in a statement, said: “Dr. Akande is an agent of change and a visionary leader with a global perspective.

    “His enterprising mind set and commitment to student success will be essential as he leads Champlain College in an evolving higher education landscape.

    “We look forward to welcoming Dr. Akande to Champlain and supporting his work to advance the College’s strategic position and build on the strength of our distinctive academic offerings.”

    Trustee and Chair of the Presidential Search Committee, Neale Lunderville, in another statement, said: “I want to offer my sincere gratitude and heartfelt appreciation to each of our committee members.

    “Their extraordinary efforts over the past many months produced a strong result: Dr. Akande will be an exceptional President for our exceptional College.”

    Dr. Akande currently serves as the Assistant Vice Chancellor for International Affairs–Africa and the Associate Director of the Global Health Center at Washington University in St. Louis.

    Prior to this new appointment, he served and held important positions in academia, business and non-profit organisations, including: member, Advisory Board of FDC Fundação Dom Cabral, the top ranked business school in Brazil, Dean and Professor of Economics (2000-2015), Walker School of Business and Technology, Webster University and the 21st President of Westminster College; Vice Chair, Board of Argent Capital Mgt. LLC, a $4 billion asset management company, member of the Danforth Plant Science Center Leadership Council, member, Board of Enterprise Bank & Trust ($5 billion assets), a Director of Ralcorp Holdings, Inc., a $5 billion publicly traded manufacturer of high quality private food labels; member, boards of the Saint Louis Art Museum, The MUNY, Missouri Charter Public School Association, and Forest Park Forever, etc.

    Akande, in his acceptance statement, said: “I am humbled and honored by the opportunity to lead Champlain College during this period of great transformation and even greater opportunity. While the challenges we currently face as global citizens are daunting, they also sharpen our focus and urge us both individually and as a community, to lead from wherever we are.

    “The commitment to educating adaptable thinkers, daring change-makers and inclusive innovators who shape professions and inspire communities is what sets Champlain College apart.

    “I look forward to taking this journey with you and thank you for the trust you have placed in me to further Champlain College’s mission together.”

  • (New Videos): *How armed UK police arrested Nigerian who paraded firearms, fired gunshots from balcony

    (New Videos): *How armed UK police arrested Nigerian who paraded firearms, fired gunshots from balcony

    The Nigerian man who fired gunshots from his balcony of a flat in Dock Head Road in Chathan, UK has reportedly been arrested.

    Recall TheNewsGuru (TNG ) had earlier posted the video of the incident.

    More recent video footage show how armed officers were deployed to the area at around 8.30am.

    Kent Police said they got calls at 8.35am on Wednesday 22 April 2020 to a disturbance at a flat on Dock Head Road, Chatham.

    “Members of the public reported seeing a man on a balcony with weapons and patrols, including armed officers, attended the scene. The police helicopter was also deployed and a man in 30s has now been arrested on suspicion of firearms offences. Patrols remain at the scene where officers have located four suspected imitation firearms as part of their enquiries.” Kent Police

  • COVID-19: 260 Europeans evacuated from Nigeria amidst fear of possible escalation

    COVID-19: 260 Europeans evacuated from Nigeria amidst fear of possible escalation

    A chartered Air France Flight AF0986 on Friday evacuated 260 European citizens from Nigeria and additional 118 European citizens from other West African countries through the Murtala Muhammed International Airport (MMIA), Lagos.

    TheNewsGuru.com, TNG reports that there had been reports of possible evacuation of European citizens despite the ban placed on international flights.

    According to reports, the Air France flight landed in Lagos via Cotonou with 118 passengers on board at 3 p.m. local time while the British High Commission is also exploring options for sending its staff, dependents and other Britons to the UK.

    Investigation revealed that the landing of the aircraft was delayed for two hours over what NCAA called “load sheet balancing” but the 260 passengers boarded the flight from Lagos and the aircraft took off to Paris about 3.44 pm local time

    It was gathered that the federal government granted Air France – KLM one-week permission to evacuate European citizens from Nigeria.

    However, the airlines are also mopping up European citizens from the West Coast because of the projection that COVID-19 spread in Africa might spike in the coming days.

    In a letter dated March 24, 2020, which emanated from the office of the Minister of Aviation, Senator Hadi Sirika, with reference no: FMA/ATMD/501/C.17/T2/562 and addressed to the General Manager of Air France- KLM in Nigeria and Ghana, Mr. Micheal Colleau, the federal government said it had approved for the airline to operate essential flights from March 26 to April 2.

    The letter read: “I am directed to acknowledge the receipt of your letter dated March 23, 2020 on the above subject and to convey the Honourable Minister’s approval for your airline to operate essential flights from Lagos to Paris with flight number AF0986 originating from Cotonou (COO 0745 LOS 0820, LOS -0950 CDG 1615).

    “I am further directed to inform you to undertake the operation strictly based on the protocol guiding the kind of operation under COVID-19 as issued by the Nigerian Aeronautical Authorities, most especially, the All Operators Letter issued by the Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA) with ref: NCAA/DG/AIR/11/16/108 dated March 23, 2020.”

    The letter was signed by the Director, Air Transport Management, MS Naibi, on behalf of the minister.

  • A Chief Justice & a Parable – Hope Eghagha

    A Chief Justice & a Parable – Hope Eghagha

    Hope Eghagha


    It is not often that a legal mind, a jurist who had risen to the highest seat in a nation’s judicial system resorts to folktales.

    What has a folktale got to do with hard facts of the law? Chief Justice! In some climes, the title is even more awesome – Lord Chief Justice! Not head of a religious court.

    Not a Mullah or a Rabbi, for whom I have some respect too! Not a Chief Justice that the World Court in The Hague would never invite on matters of the law! But a rounded man.

    A man who can seat at table with Judges from other parts of the world discussing The Law. Not the laws guiding or misguiding bigots of any religion! But the Law as the Law. Wish I had read Law! I had always looked at the hood (red or white) of judges with infinite awe, you know, dispassionate and incorruptible men who could whisk you off to gaol, if you were so unfortunate as to appear before them on the wrong side of the law.

    The Law is the Law. No embellishments. No unnecessary flourish when dispensing matters of law! Let me not veer into miscarriage of the law or influencing the law through Mammon of Unrighteousness in this outing. That should be for another day!

    Story telling is for philosophers and pastors. For didactic parents. And for teachers! But a jurist is a teacher too. Just like a creative writer. He has the freedom to resort to stories, powerful anecdotes to reach the discerning mind. Tales, as we read from Aesop, are often more instructive than didactic lectures or pontificating sermons. The capacity to distil the essence of a story especially in a delicate situation, is to be cultivated.

    You see, I may have forgotten the lashes of the cane my dad inflicted on my backside when I broke some laws, written and unwritten some fifty-five years ago. But I have not, will never forget the stories mother told us about Tortoise or Bird or Lion. They were so impactful that the first time I saw a tortoise, that is, as a ten year old boy, I took time to examine it (Him) and wondered how it managed to acquire the wisdom with which he vanquished all other animals.

    So, when I read that former Chief Justice of Nigeria, the distinguished and honourable Walter Onnoghen, addressed a gathering of lawyers in Calabar and belted out a parable, I took literary notice. Just as he would have taken legal notice had the reigning forces of national occupation not violated all codes of ethical conduct to hound him out of the way for a pliant and pliable body. Which is unfortunate. Not decent for the image of the occupants of that exalted body. Not good for the judiciary. Not good for Nigeria. Not good for the young ones growing up in the land! To be sure, that action has received all kinds of interpretation. And will remain so till the end of time. Sadly, I must say. Remediation will come someday, we hope, when the current cloud of imperial impudence is cleared from the land by the Chief Justice of the Universe. ‘And for that day,’ wrote George Orwell in Animal Farm, ‘we all must labour, though we die before it breaks!

    Justice Onnoghen waxed eloquent when he narrated the tale. Let us quote him in full. “A lion, the king of the jungle one day was drinking water from the upstream when it noticed an antelope downstream that was also drinking water. The lion shouted at the antelope and accused it of ruffling the water. The antelope reminded the great lion that, he lion, is the one drinking from upstream and therefore the only one that can ruffle the waters. Not done, the lion went on and accused the antelope of abusing him, the king of the jungle during the burial of antelope’s grandfather sometimes in the past. The antelope replied that he couldn’t have insulted the king of the jungle at the burial since he was not yet born then. The lion roared back that I am going to eat you for lunch today to which the antelope replied: “That’s what you should have said in the first place”.

    Now, what does this tale mean? ‘I am not blind; I am only ignoring you,’ the philosopher once said. Is Onnoghen also among the Prophets of Tale Telling? Hardly so. But he has become a prophetic disciple as a result of the injustice unleashed on him and the callous lust for power of certain scoundrels in power. If the saying ‘giving a dog a bad name in order to hang him’ had no meaning to us before, it has come to settle fully in the land with biting fury and sorrow. A lion, the lion did not have to look for a reason, an excuse to eat up the antelope. In the view of Antelope, Lion ought to have proceeded to have its meal without the pretence of alleging or proving guilt. This itself, showed the inherent weakness and moral vacuity of Lion. The façade of deep corruption was clear to all, even to people with half an eye!

    I have always been afraid and wary of smallminded people. You know, we encounter them in church, in the mosque, in families and in offices. They are often very dangerous. Especially so when they grab or placed in power. Smallminded persons drag institutions to their level. This is the danger of enthroning mediocrity in any guise, whether through filial or ethnic or religious loyalty. Such persons feel obliged to reciprocate the kind gesture. Not like Archbishop Thomas Beckett the hero in T.S. Eliot’s 1935 play Murder in the Cathedral who, after being appointed Archbishop of Canterbury by King Henry II decided to be true to his calling as a man of God, discarding his previous extravagant lifestyle for the ascetic life required of priests. At the height of his frustration, King Henry is reported to have screamed: ‘Will no one rid me of this turbulent priest?’ Too late. A man of honour had emerged from the ashes of debauchery!

    Our institutions, willy nilly, will outlive us. May be in tatters. Reputation gone. Bruised. Humiliated. Self-confidence in doubt. A silhouette. A carcass. But a structure still in the public space. Perhaps in name only. Peopled by pusillanimous characters who revel in puerile ideas, if ideas they have at all. But a freefall, we must remember, is not a perpetual, not a forever thing. It has a timeframe. Known only to the Chief Justice of the Universe. He, who cannot be removed or bribed or cajoled. Our nation will outlive us too, hopefully. Foolishness is not forever. Wisdom is forever. In the end, wisdom from above will triumph. The tyranny of myopia is not wisdom. It is senile foolishness! Chief Justice Onnoghen, thank you for your cryptic folkloric reference and native wisdom! May those who have ears hear!

    Eghagha can be reached on 08023220393 and heghagha@yahoo.com

  • Prominent Nigerian physician dies of Coronavirus

    Prominent Nigerian physician dies of Coronavirus

    A prominent Nigerian medical doctor, Olumide Okunuga has died of the raging Coronavirus disease in Canada.

    According to reports by US-based blog, Irohinoodua, Okunuga died on Saturday morning at 63 years.

    Okunuga is the first Nigerian known to have died of the dreaded disease.

    He was the President of Egbe Omo Yoruba, Emila Romagna and Vice-President of Yoruba National Community in Italy.

    He was a pathologist and native of Ikenne Remo, in Ogun State.

    Dr Okunuga was also a two-time Councillor for Modena in Italy where he had lived for 35 years. He was diagnosed to have contacted Coronavirus in Canada, a country which has recently been hit by the deadly virus, Irohinoodua said.

    It quoted sources as saying that the remains of Dr. Okunuga were asked to be recognised from a distance by his daughter, Dr. Bolanle Okunuga, whose mother is a Caucasian of Italian origin.

    Irohinoodua further quoted Canadian health officials as saying that Dr Okunuga’s body would not be released but had to be cremated.

    “His death has left the Yoruba community in Italy totally devastated. We have lost a very great man who is in the apex of his career,” an official of the Egbe Omo Yoruba who does not wish to be named told Irohinoodua.

    Also mourning Dr Odunuga, Mr Abiodun Gbadamosi, an official of Egbe Omo Yoruba in North America, said: “We lost a great man this weekend. He was an affectionate and decent man who lived for others through his meritorious services since he left Nigeria for Canada many years ago.”

  • Nigerian tests positive for coronavirus in US

    Nigerian tests positive for coronavirus in US

    Mayor of Washington D.C. Muriel Bowser said a Nigerian who passed through the US capital city has tested positive for coronavirus in neighbouring state of Maryland.

    She announced this at a news conference on Saturday night.

    She said the Nigerian had visited Washington D.C. and tested positive later in Maryland. All his contacts are being traced in the city.

    Bowser had earlier announced that a man in his 50s has tested positive for coronavirus, marking the first presumptively confirmed case in the capital.

    She said the man started exhibiting symptoms of COVID-19 in late February and was hospitalized Thursday.

    President Donald Trump says he isn’t concerned “at all” about the coronavirus getting closer to the White House after the first Washington case and an attendee of a recent political conference where Trump himself had spoken also tested positive for the virus.

    Nineteen people have died in the U.S. from the virus. The number of infections in the U.S. is now above 400.

  • Another Nigerian in isolation over coronavirus

    Another Nigerian in isolation over coronavirus

    A Nigerian, who returned from France three days ago, has been put in isolation, Lagos Commissioner for Health, Prof Akin Abayomi, has stated.

    He said the suspected case is at the Infectious Disease Centre, Yaba.

    Abayomi at a briefing on Wednesday said the patient was referred to the Infectious Disease Hospital by a private hospital in Lagos.

    The Commissioner said the result of the patient would be released the moment it is ready.

    Giving hints on the suspected case, Abayomi said: “He is a Nigerian who went to France, spent seven days in France, returned to Lagos three days ago and presented with headache and some respiratory symptoms.

    “This is because he has been in a country where there is an active person-to-person transmission, it could be common cold and there is a possibility that it could be coronavirus.

    “He has been put in isolation, the test is being run right now, I am expecting the result.”

  • Drug trafficking: NDLEA secures release of Nigerian held by Saudi Arabia for three years

    The National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) says it has secured the freedom of one Ibrahim Abubakar, a Nigerian held in Saudi Arabia for alleged drug trafficking.

    Ibrahim was released after three years of incarceration in the Middle Eastern country following presentations from investigation reports by NDLEA that exonerated him.

    Abubakar was arrested upon arrival in Saudi Arabia when his luggage was found to contain 1, 497 tablets of illicit tramadol.

    He has been standing trial since 2017 in Saudi Arabia where punishment for drug trafficking is execution.

    The Agency said they presented evidence that proved that the drugs were planted on Ibrahim and he was innocent of the crime he was accused of. Three persons have been arrested for planting the drugs on Ibrahim.

    There were contained in a statement by the Principal Staff Officer, Public Affairs, of the Agency, Jonah Achema, made available to The Nation in Abuja on Wednesday.

    The statement read in part, “Efforts by National Drug Law Enforcement Agency to secure freedom for Ibrahim Ibrahim Abubakar, a Nigerian held by Saudi Arabia for Drug Trafficking has finally paid off. Abubakar has been released after three years of incarceration in Saudi following presentations from investigation reports by NDLEA that exonerated him.

    “A delegation from Nigeria in Diaspora Commission, NIDCOM, and Zamfara State Government, the home state of Abubakar, arrived in Jeddah with documentary evidence provided by NDLEA for the trial slated for 18th February 2020.

    “The documentary evidence included a correspondent from NDLEA stating that it had arrested and charged three persons who planted the Tramadol tablets on the defendant and a certified copy of the two counts charge sheet from the Federal High Court Kano. These documents were provided to the Saudi Court after which it ruled in favour of Ibrahim and discharged him.

    “On December 15, 2017, a letter of complaint was written by Malam Gwani Sadiq Siddiq from Zamfara seeking NDLEA to intervene on the arrest of Abubakar by the Saudi Anti-narcotic officials. The Agency swung into investigation, which revealed that Abubakar travelled to Saudi on March 10, 2017 through Malam Aminu Kano International Airport and was arrested by the Saudi Anti-narcotic officials at Medina Airport for importing 1, 497 tablets of Tramadol. The substance was allegedly concealed in a bag and tagged to his passport at MAKIA by his travel agent named Mahmood Sani and two other handlers at the Airport, one Mrs. Celina Yaycock and Mr. Anthony Johnson.

    “These suspects have since been charged to Federal High Court, Kano.”