Tag: Regrets

  • Angel explains why she regrets participating in BBNaija show

    Angel explains why she regrets participating in BBNaija show

    Big Brother Naija season 6 star, Angel Smith has revealed that she regrets participating in the reality TV show.

    Angel made this revelation in a radio interview in Lagos.

    She said that her regret was not borne out of an experience or bad situation but she just started feeling regret for going into the BBNaija show.

    The reality TV star blames her fans for always reading meanings to her post on social media and linking them to her experience while in the house.

     

    “Sometimes it has to do with the fans, sometimes the trolling gets too much. There are days where you are grateful and there are days when you are angry at God. It’s a mixture everything,” she said

    Angel Agnes Smith was one of the female housemates in Big Brother season 6 (shine ya eye). BBNaija Angel was the first female to enter the big brother house after the female housemates were unveiled on 25th July 2021.

    The 22-year-old reality star describes herself as fun and somewhat of a drama queen

  • Antonio Conte regrets becoming Tottenham coach

    Antonio Conte regrets becoming Tottenham coach

    Chelsea and Tottenham legends, Jason Cundy and Jamie O’Hara have noted that Tottenham coach, Antonio Conte is regretting joining the Premier League club.

    Both former Premier League stars shared the view after Conte hit out at Tottenham’s transfer business and winning mentality in a stunning interview with Sky Italia on Wednesday.

    Spurs are struggling with form and Conte hit at the club, saying they are now ‘weaker’ after the January window.

    Tottenham brought in Rodrigo Bentancur and Dejan Kulusevski from Juventus, but before then, four senior players were allowed to leave the club in the persons of Tanguy Ndomble, Dele Alli, Bryan Gil and Giovani Lo Celso.

    “We lost four players in January. Four important players for Tottenham, and we brought in only two. So, even just in terms of numbers, rather than reinforce the squad, we on paper weakened it,” Conte cried out.

    And reacting to this, Cundy told talkSPORT that the former Juventus, Chelsea and Inter Milan boss, “Basically he’s saying, why have I come to Spurs?

    “That is a statement of regret. He knows it’s going to come back.

    “It’s damning what he has said there. But he’s talking facts.”

    And O’Hara echoed Cundy’s sentiments, saying Conte’s comments will have done his players no good.

    O’Hara said: “It’s too honest. I’m not happy about it. He’s covering his own back and digging everyone else out at the club.

    “I know he’s speaking facts, but he can’t do that as manager.

    “If you’re a player you’re a little bit disappointed in the gaffer there.

    “You can see he’s not happy, on the sidelines, he looks like he’s crushed and the weight of the world is on his shoulders and he doesn’t know how to get out.

    “He’s always had great players and he’s always had clubs who want to win the league and now he’s at a club that doesn’t want to win the league.”

  • My regrets as UK Prime Minister – Theresa May

    Outgoing British Prime Minister, Theresa May, said she regrets allowing too much polarisation over Brexit and avoiding televised debates before a disastrous snap election in 2017, in an interview published on Friday.
    May resigned as leader of the ruling Conservatives in June after she conceded defeat in her two-year battle to persuade parliament to approve the deal she had agreed to with Brussels for Britain to leave the EU.
    “I did everything I could to get it over the line.
    “I was willing to sit down with (opposition Labour leader) Jeremy Corbyn, willing to sacrifice my premiership, give up my job!” May told the popular right-wing tabloid The Daily Mail.
    “I had assumed mistakenly that the tough bit of the negotiation was with the EU, that parliament would accept the vote of the British people (in the 2016 Brexit referendum) and just want to get it done.
    She said that people who’d spent their lives campaigning for Brexit would vote to get us out,” she said. “But they didn’t.”
    May agreed that she should have done more to halt “the polarisation between the language of soft and hard Brexit” that divided the Conservative and Labour parties, as well as British voters.
    She is expected to hand over the reins on July 24 to the victor in a run-off to succeed her as leader of the Conservatives and the country, after a vote by the party’s 160,000 members between strong favourite Boris Johnson and Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt.
    Johnson is backed by many of the “hard” Brexiteer Conservative lawmakers who strongly opposed May’s deal and played an important role in pushing May to resign.
    May said she also regrets her refusal to take part in televised debates before a disastrous snap election in June 2017.
    “I should have done the TV debates. I didn’t because I had seen them suck the life blood out of David Cameron’s campaign,’’she said, referring to her Conservative predecessor as prime minister, who resigned after losing the Brexit referendum.
    May called the 2017 snap election to ask voters to back her leadership and her Brexit plan, but she lost her majority in parliament, forcing her to rely on Northern Ireland’s Democratic Unionist Party to keep her in power.

    She previously expressed regret that her focus on Brexit prevented her from promoting plans to improve social cohesion in Britain.
    On Friday, she announced a new Office for Tackling Injustices to monitor progress by all government agencies in tackling social injustices.
    “Deep-seated societal injustice requires a long-term focus and cannot be eliminated overnight,” May said in a statement.
    She said she is “proud” of her efforts as prime minister to “make the UK a more just society.”
    The new office “will go further, using the power of data… to shine a spotlight on key injustices and provide the catalyst for better policy solutions,” May added.

  • 2019: No regrets apologizing to Nigerians over mistakes of 16 years, PDP tells FG, APC

    The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) has said it does not regret apologising to Nigerians over its past mistakes during the sixteen years it held sway as the country’s ruling party.

    The party in a statement on Tuesday by its spokesperson, Kola Ologbodiyan, said as a responsible party committed to the good of Nigerians, having learnt its lessons, it saw it as necessary to make the move.

    Recall that the chairman of the party, Uche Secondus, had Monday apologised to Nigerians for the mistakes it made while in power.

    The party has, however, criticised the reactions of the federal government and the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) to the apology.

    Recall that the APC in a statement on Tuesday said the PDP will have to do more for Nigerians to forgive its misrule of 16 years, saying an apology is not enough.

    The APC also called on the PDP to confess what it referred to as its sins.

    The federal government also in a statement by Minister of Information and Culture, Lai Mohammed, said the PDP will have to return the funds it looted for it to be forgiven.

    Commenting on the reactions, the PDP said it was deeply sad that people were suffering because of the party it voted for in its place, saying the APC has wrecked the economy and inflicted on Nigerians hunger, starvation and daily bloodletting.

    The party claimed Nigerians are now looking up to its “repositioned and rebranded platform” to pull the country from the brinks and return it to the path of true democracy, national cohesion and economic prosperity, which it said were the hallmarks of PDP’s 16 years in government.

    Admitting it made mistakes in its internal administration prior to the 2015 general elections, the opposition party said its new leadership had already smoothened the rough edges to ensure strict adherence to internal democracy and good governance in all processes.

    “Our apology to Nigerians is the pathway to national healing, renewal of hope and remobilisation of the citizenry for the task of rescuing the nation from the current pathetic situation and the painful misrule of the All Progressives Congress (APC),” the party said.

    “Our apology is to ask Nigerians, once again, to put their trust in the rebranded PDP, particularly, as our party is the only platform that is committed to the national agenda of peace, unity, justice and prosperous nation.”

  • No regrets leading Nigeria – Obasanjo

    Former President Olusegun Obasanjo on Friday said he does not regret his actions as the nation’s leader both under the military and civilians regime.

    The former President spoke on Friday in Bayelsa State where he had gone to inaugurate projects, especially in the health sector, initiated and completed by the state Governor, Mr. Seriake Dickson.

    Obasanjo, who commissioned the Bayelsa Specialist Hospital, the Bayelsa Drug Mart and the Bayelsa Diagnostic Centre, also declared that he had no regrets in all the leadership roles he played even at the Presidency.

    The former President, in a special interactive session with pupils of the famous Ijaw National Academy (INA) in Kaiama, Kolokuma-Opokuma, said nobody would stop him from speaking if he noticed things were going wrong.

    But he noted that Nigeria would rise above its challenges, disclosing that in his recent trip to Rome, the Nigerian Ambassador there informed him that 1,600 Nigerians were languishing in Italian prisons.

    Responding to the question of one of the pupils, he said: “If I believe that Nigeria has no hope, I will find a way of committing suicide immediately. Then what am I living for? I am an incurable optimist about Nigeria. Nigeria has hope.

    There are many things that we should have done that we have not done as we should have done them. There is no doubt about that. But that doesn’t mean that Nigeria has no hope. Hope is what drives human beings.

    If you are a person without hope, you are a person without life. How can I therefore say Nigeria has no hope? Nigeria has hope. And you are part of the hope of Nigeria. The question you have asked me is a very sensible question and that means with you asking me that type of question it heightens my own conviction that Nigeria has hope.

    My generation or the generation before me gave us independence. It doesn’t matter what you think about them. My generation fought for the unity of this country and laid the foundation of democracy.

    Then people of governor Dickson generation should be able to say they built on our foundation. That is how a nation continues to make progress. The governor is doing wonderfully well. Anybody coming after him will do something else. The person will not start building the INA from the scratch. The academy has already been established.

    In spite of our difficulties; I came back from Rome last night. Our Ambassador there, who was a kind man, he was in the Navy; he told me that his major problem is that there are 1,600 Nigerians in Italian prisons. That is a problem.

    But we shouldn’t because of that say there is no hope for Nigeria? No. I will say we have a problem that we have to address and if we don’t address it we are postponing the evil day. That doesn’t mean that Nigeria has no hope. Never lose hope.

    Nigeria has great hope because of you; great hope because of what the governor is doing and great hope because I will not keep my mouth shut when I see anything wrong in Nigeria”.

    On whether he had regrets in office as the President, Obasanjo said: “With the knowledge, resources and facilities that I had, was there anything that I did not do? No.

    If I had more resources, then I think I would have done differently, but with what I had and the resources at my disposal, I would say no, I did all that is humanly possible when I was President. I was not perfect, only God is. “Also bear in mind that people you work with will make sure you don’t see certain things. Some of them will do everything. What is important is that you should not have a regret. I do not have a regret when I was in government or in any leadership position I have held. No regret”.

    Obasanjo, who earlier paid a courtesy visit to the secretariat of the state Traditional Rulers Council, chaired by the King of Brass, King Alfred Diette Spiff, further said that one of the things Nigeria needed to do and do it well to be stable was the issue of security.

    He expressed shock over the rapid transformation in the state under Dickson commending him for maintaining the peace in Bayelsa.

    He said that Dickson had set a security model that other states in the country should emulate to ensure peace in their domains.

    He said: “One of the things that struck me about your (Dickson’s) administration is the relative peace that you have maintained in the state. I do not know how you have done it, may be we should all come to learn under your tutelage.

    This is so because one of the things we need to do and do well today in this country today is the issue of security. Security is, and of course, stability.

    The point is this: If one state is peaceful, secured and safe in Nigeria, it is an example to others and it goes a long way because the aggregate peacefulness, the aggregate security and the aggregate security is what makes for peace, security and stability of our country.

    You called me a Bayelsan and I ought to be. I said to the governor that any good man must feel proud to be called a Bayelsan. Because here, you have seen real transformation. If there is a place where you can say, come and see transformation taking place, this is one place in the country.”

    He, therefore, suggested that the younger generation should be accommodated in the nation’s political leadership because “although they are future leaders, tomorrow might not come again.”

    Obasanjo said: “We have to make allowance for them where we have to make allowance for them but we must make provision for them. We must make accommodation for them because they are not only the leaders of tomorrow.

    Their leadership must start from today because if we leave them only till tomorrow, they will never be left waiting for tomorrow that may never come. Today must be their time; let us accommodate them, let us make room for them, thus carry them along.”

    The former President also said that despite other qualities a leader should possess, Nigeria was in need of a leader with the fear of God.

    One thing the books on leadership don’t always talk about which I found very important is the fear of God. If you are a leader that fears God, the chances are that you will be a good leader. If you are a leader that doesn’t fear God, forget it”, he said.

    Dickson on his part highlighted some of the roles Obasanjo played for the state, including ensuring that an Ijaw man became a Vice-President from where he rose to be the President of the country.

    Describing himself as a student of Obasanjo’s school of leadership, Dickson showcased his achievements in health, education and agriculture.

    These things were built for the benefit of our people. In this state, there is democratisation of health care. I believe in fair and just leadership because leaders in the end are also human beings.

    While it is right to expect perfection from leaders, you cannot find perfection in any leader. While we strive towards perfection, what I have found useful in my own little way, is that I always want to convince myself knowing that actions and inactions of leaders have consequences.

    You have to convince yourself that what you are doing or not doing is in the best interest of the people and you remain true to yourself and to God. Let it be said that you did your best. There must be corresponding courage to do what is right”.

    While receiving Obasanjo at the Traditional Rulers’ Council, Spiff expressed delight at the brand new secretariat donated to the council by Dickson, saying it was a clear indication of the value he attached to traditional stools.

    He said the governor promoted eight other stools in the state to first-class status, adding that Dickson created a fourth class for village heads to reach the grassroots for developmental and political reasons.

    He congratulated Obasanjo for his doctoral degree describing his style of life as unique.